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AN OVERVIEW OF THE

FEDERAL R&D BUDGET


FOR FISCAL YEAR 2007
HEARING
BEFORE THE

COMMITTEE ON SCIENCE
HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
ONE HUNDRED NINTH CONGRESS
SECOND SESSION

FEBRUARY 15, 2006

Serial No. 10935

Printed for the use of the Committee on Science

(
Available via the World Wide Web: http://www.house.gov/science

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25938PS

2006

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COMMITTEE ON SCIENCE
HON. SHERWOOD L. BOEHLERT, New York, Chairman
RALPH M. HALL, Texas
BART GORDON, Tennessee
LAMAR S. SMITH, Texas
JERRY F. COSTELLO, Illinois
CURT WELDON, Pennsylvania
EDDIE BERNICE JOHNSON, Texas
DANA ROHRABACHER, California
LYNN C. WOOLSEY, California
KEN CALVERT, California
DARLENE HOOLEY, Oregon
ROSCOE G. BARTLETT, Maryland
MARK UDALL, Colorado
VERNON J. EHLERS, Michigan
DAVID WU, Oregon
GIL GUTKNECHT, Minnesota
MICHAEL M. HONDA, California
FRANK D. LUCAS, Oklahoma
BRAD MILLER, North Carolina
JUDY BIGGERT, Illinois
LINCOLN DAVIS, Tennessee
WAYNE T. GILCHREST, Maryland
RUSS CARNAHAN, Missouri
W. TODD AKIN, Missouri
DANIEL LIPINSKI, Illinois
TIMOTHY V. JOHNSON, Illinois
SHEILA JACKSON LEE, Texas
J. RANDY FORBES, Virginia
BRAD SHERMAN, California
JO BONNER, Alabama
BRIAN BAIRD, Washington
TOM FEENEY, Florida
JIM MATHESON, Utah
BOB INGLIS, South Carolina
JIM COSTA, California
DAVE G. REICHERT, Washington
AL GREEN, Texas
MICHAEL E. SODREL, Indiana
CHARLIE MELANCON, Louisiana
JOHN J.H. JOE SCHWARZ, Michigan
DENNIS MOORE, Kansas
MICHAEL T. MCCAUL, Texas
VACANCY
VACANCY

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CONTENTS
February 15, 2006
Page

Witness List .............................................................................................................


Hearing Charter ......................................................................................................

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3

Opening Statements
Statement by Representative Sherwood L. Boehlert, Chairman, Committee
on Science, U.S. House of Representatives ........................................................
Written Statement ............................................................................................
Statement by Representative Bart Gordon, Minority Ranking Member, Committee on Science, U.S. House of Representatives ............................................
Written Statement ............................................................................................
Prepared Statement by Representative Ken Calvert, Chairman, Subcommittee
on Space and Aeronautics, Committee on Science, U.S. House of Representatives .....................................................................................................................
Prepared Statement by Representative Vernon J. Ehlers, Chairman, Subcommittee on Environment, Technology, and Standards, Committee on
Science, U.S. House of Representatives .............................................................
Prepared Statement by Representative Jerry F. Costello, Member, Committee
on Science, U.S. House of Representatives ........................................................
Prepared Statement by Representative Eddie Bernice Johnson, Member, Committee on Science, U.S. House of Representatives ............................................
Prepared Statement by Representative Michael M. Honda, Member, Committee on Science, U.S. House of Representatives ............................................
Prepared Statement by Representative Russ Carnahan, Member, Committee
on Science, U.S. House of Representatives ........................................................
Prepared Statement by Representative Sheila Jackson Lee, Member, Committee on Science, U.S. House of Representatives ............................................

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Witnesses:
Dr. John H. Marburger III, Director, Office of Science and Technology Policy
Oral Statement .................................................................................................
Written Statement ............................................................................................
Biography ..........................................................................................................
Dr. Samuel W. Bodman, Secretary, Department of Energy
Oral Statement .................................................................................................
Written Statement ............................................................................................
Biography ..........................................................................................................
Dr. David A. Sampson, Deputy Secretary, Department of Commerce
Oral Statement .................................................................................................
Written Statement ............................................................................................
Biography ..........................................................................................................
Dr. Arden L. Bement, Jr., Director, National Science Foundation
Oral Statement .................................................................................................
Written Statement ............................................................................................
Biography ..........................................................................................................
Dr. Charles E. McQueary, Under Secretary, Science and Technology, Department of Homeland Security
Oral Statement .................................................................................................
Written Statement ............................................................................................

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Page

Dr. Charles E. McQueary, Under Secretary, Science and Technology, Department of Homeland SecurityContinued
Biography ..........................................................................................................
Discussion .................................................................................................................

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Appendix: Answers to Post-Hearing Questions


Dr. John H. Marburger III, Director, Office of Science and Technology Policy ..
Dr. Samuel W. Bodman, Secretary, Department of Energy .................................
Dr. David A. Sampson, Deputy Secretary, Department of Commerce ................
Dr. Arden L. Bement, Jr., Director, National Science Foundation ......................
Dr. Charles E. McQueary, Under Secretary, Science and Technology, Department of Homeland Security .................................................................................

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AN OVERVIEW OF THE FEDERAL R&D


BUDGET FOR FISCAL YEAR 2007
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 2006

HOUSE

OF

REPRESENTATIVES,
COMMITTEE ON SCIENCE,
Washington, DC.

The Committee met, pursuant to call, at 10:00 a.m., in Room


2318 of the Rayburn House Office Building, Hon. Sherwood L.
Boehlert [Chairman of the Committee] presiding.

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3
HEARING CHARTER

COMMITTEE ON SCIENCE
U.S. HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES

An Overview of the
Federal R&D Budget
for Fiscal Year 2007
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 2006
10:00 A.M.1:00 P.M.
2318 RAYBURN HOUSE OFFICE BUILDING

1. Purpose
On Wednesday, February 15, 2006, the House Science Committee will hold a
hearing to consider President Bushs fiscal year 2007 (FY07) budget request for research and development (R&D). Five Administration witnesses will review the proposed budget in the context of the Presidents overall priorities in science and technology. The Science Committee will hold a separate hearing on February 16th to
examine the budget request for the National Aeronautics and Space Administration
(NASA).
2. Witnesses
Dr. John H. Marburger III is Director of the Office of Science and Technology Policy (OSTP), the White House science office. Prior to joining OSTP, Dr. Marburger
served as President of the State University of New York at Stony Brook and as Director of the Brookhaven National Laboratory.
Dr. Samuel W. Bodman is the Secretary of the Department of Energy (DOE).
Prior to joining DOE, Dr. Bodman served as Deputy Secretary of the Treasury and
Deputy Secretary of the Department of Commerce (DOC). He also served in executive positions in several publicly owned corporations and as a professor of chemical
engineering at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
Dr. David A. Sampson is the Deputy Secretary of the Department of Commerce,
which includes the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) and the
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA). Previously, Dr. Sampson served as Assistant Secretary of Commerce for Economic Development and head
of the Economic Development Administration.
Dr. Arden L. Bement is the Director of the National Science Foundation (NSF).
Prior to his appointment to NSF, Dr. Bement was Director of NIST and professor
and head of the School of Nuclear Engineering at Purdue University.
Dr. Charles E. McQueary is the Under Secretary for Science and Technology
(S&T) at the Department of Homeland Security (DHS). Prior to joining the Department, Dr. McQueary served as President of General Dynamics Advanced Technology
Systems, as President and Vice President of business units for AT&T, Lucent Technologies, and as a Director for AT&T Bell Laboratories.
3. Background
Overall Budget
Under the Presidents proposed budget for FY07, overall discretionary spending
would increase by 3.2 percent, which the Administration describes as a level just
under the projected rate of inflation of 3.3 percent. Consistent with Administration
priorities, the increases are heavily weighted toward spending on defense and homeland security. Discretionary spending, excluding defense spending and homeland security spending across the government (i.e., non-security spending) would be reduced by 0.5 percent, according to the Administrations calculations.
Snapshot of Research and Development (R&D) Spending
There are many ways of describing the R&D budget (see below), depending on
what one wants to emphasize or determine. For example, development can be excluded or included; defense and homeland spending can be excluded or included; an

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entire agencys budget can be included or only those parts directly related to research and/or development. In addition, different baselines can be used for FY06.
For example, supplemental funding can be excluded or included; Congressional earmarks can be excluded or included. In this charter, the FY06 enacted levels are used
as the baseline unless otherwise noted.
The Presidents proposed FY07 budget does not treat R&D uniformly, but rather
provides significant increases in priority areas, while reducing or freezing spending
in other areas. Therefore, aggregate numbers mask the wide variation in individual
agencies and programs. The budget provides large percentage increases for the three
physical science agencies included in the American Competitiveness Initiative the
President announced in the State of the Union messageresearch funding at the
National Science Foundation (NSF), internal programs at the National Institute of
Standards and Technology (NIST) and the Office of Science at the Department of
Energy (DOE). In keeping with the Advanced Energy Initiative, also unveiled in the
State of the Union address, some of the energy supply research programs of DOE
also receive significant boosts (detailed below). And the basic research programs of
DOD, which fund a great deal of university research in the physical sciences, also
appear to fare well if earmarks are removed from the FY06 base.
The budgets for other R&D agencies reflect their lower priority. Most notably, the
National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), after two years of significant increases, would see its budget increase by one percent (or by 3.2 percent if
emergency money to recover from Hurricane Katrina is excluded from the FY06
base). The budget for the National Institutes of Health (NIH), which had seen its
budget double in the years leading up to FY06, would be frozen. These proposals
damp down the aggregate numbers for research spending since they are larger than
the agencies receiving increases. (The proposed budgets for the three agencies in the
American Competitiveness Initiative total about $10.5 billion, while NASA alone is
slated to receive close to $17 billion and NIH is budgeted at more than $28 billion.)
Federal Research and Development Budget
The Presidents budget proposes to spend $137.2 billion on R&D in FY07, an increase of $3.4 billion, or 2.6 percent, over FY06.1 Non-security R&D funding grows
by $1.1 billion or 1.8 percent. Funding is heavily weighted toward development,
which would increase by $4.88 billion, or seven percent).2 Basic research is up
slightly ($357 million, or one percent) and applied research is cut significantly
($1.83 billion, or seven percent).
Federal Science and Technology Budget
The Federal Science and Technology (FS&T) budget, is a method the National
Academy of Sciences recommended to evaluate the impact of the budget on true research (as opposed to large development projects that build on the results of research that has already been completed). In the FY07 budget proposal, funding for
FS&T declines by one percent, or $594 million, to $59.8 billion. Many of the cuts
that contribute to that number reflect the Administrations zeroing out of FY06 earmarks. Earmarking has been increasing rapidly in recent years, and some of the
earmarks are for projects that are entirely unrelated to the work of the program
being earmarked.
American Competitiveness Initiative
The American Competitiveness Initiative calls for doubling the combined (not necessarily the individual) budgets of NSF, NIST and the DOE Office of Science over
the next 10 years, and the FY07 budget proposals represent the down-payment to
begin that process.
In addition to those funding increases, the Initiative includes education and tax
programs. The Presidents budget request proposes $380 million for new programs
at the Department of Education to improve science, technology, engineering, and
math (STEM) education at the K12 levels. Specifically, the programs are designed
to enable more teachers to teach Advanced Placement courses, to bring math and
science professionals into the classroom to evaluate approaches to teaching math
and science, and to improve math instruction at the elementary and middle school
levels. Despite the Initiative, the overall discretionary budget for the Department
of Education drops by about $2 billion in the Presidents budget.
Finally, as part of the American Competitiveness Initiative, the President has also
proposed making the R&D tax credit permanent and working with Congress to mod1A

complete federal R&D spending table is provided at the end of the charter in Appendix

II.
2 Defense

development is by far the largest factor in the overall R&D increase, accounting for
$3.1 billion in added spending.

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ernize the rules companies may use to calculate how much of their R&D spending
is eligible for the tax credit. At a cost of about $86 billion over 10 years, the tax
credit is by far the most expensive aspect of the Initiative.
Earmarking
The American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) has calculated
that Congressional earmarks in R&D programs totaled $2.36 billion in the FY06 appropriations.3 This is 13 percent higher than in FY05 and 63 percent higher than
in FY03. The Administration removes earmarks from an agencys base funding before developing the next years budget. (The Administration does not necessarily use
the same definition of earmark as does AAAS, and the Administration sometimes
classifies as earmarks whole programs created by Congress, even if they are truly
open to all qualified parties.) Moreover, earmarks can be for activities that an agency would otherwise undertake but not necessarily at the earmarked location, for activities related to an agencys programs, or for activities with little connection to an
agencys activities. NISTs construction account, for example, has been earmarked
for projects that have no relationship whatsoever to that laboratory.
4. Primary Issues
Here are some key questions raised by the FY07 budget request along with relevant background:
Overall Funding Levels and Balance
The American Competitiveness Initiative reflects the calls from leaders in industry
and higher education to increase spending for physical science research, which has
lagged for years behind the bounding growth for biomedical research. Most notably,
the report the National Academy of Sciences released last November, Rising Above
the Gathering Storm, recommended increasing federal funding for long-term basic
research for 10 percent a year for seven years, with emphasis on the physical
sciences, including in the basic research programs of DOD, and other reports have
made similar recommendations.
The issues raised by the overall approach to R&D funding are:
1) Does the budget set the appropriate priorities for R&D funding and
fund them adequately? The budget does provide additional funding for the
physical sciences, far in excess of the overall growth in the budget. However,
some critics note that the funding increases are less than those called for in
various reports and are below the levels authorized in laws that originated
in the Science Committee, such as the National Science Foundation Authorization Act of 2002 and the Energy Policy Act of 2005.
2) Does the budget provide adequate funding for agencies not considered a priority? The greatest budget disputes are likely to revolve around
funding for NIH and other agencies that do not receive increases. As noted
earlier, most of those agencies have increased more rapidly in recent years.
3) Will the proposed investments ensure future U.S. competitiveness?
Critics of increased spending may argue that holding the line on more spending and focusing on regulatory or other changes would have a greater impact
on U.S. ability to fend off international competition. Supporters of the spending increases have varying ideas on how to target the funding (in terms of
scientific disciplines, areas of technology, and the riskiness of research) to
get the best results. Ideas about targeting could be part of future authorizing
legislation. For example, many reports recommend that some research funds
should be set aside for riskier, more cross-disciplinary research that may not
be selected through normal peer review processes.
Applied Energy Research
Funding for applied research in the FY07 budget is focused on long-range initiatives, such as the Presidents hydrogen initiative, while shorter payoff areas of research are de-emphasized. For example, energy efficiency R&D is slated to decline
by 11 percent, and some deployment programs are eliminated. Does the budget
appropriately balance funding for technologies that could reduce energy
dependence in the near term with research on technologies with longerterm expected payoffs, such as hydrogen and fusion? The budget includes a
3 Note that the $2.36 billion underestimates the total impact of earmarking on science agencies and programs, as it does not include earmarking of research accounts to pay for non-R&D
expenditures. AAAS analysis of earmarks is available at http://www.aaas.org/spp/rd/
earm06c.htm.

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proposal to promote nuclear energy worldwide called the Global Nuclear Energy
Partnership. Included in this effort are design efforts for three new projects. These
projects would require large outyear funding, in addition to existing outyear funding
commitments to the Next Generation Nuclear Plant. Given the future budget
outlook, how will DOE manage these large outyear funding commitments?
The budget also proposes the elimination of DOEs oil and gas R&D, and to repeal
the mandatory funding authority for the Ultra-Deepwater and Unconventional Natural Gas program created by the Energy Policy Act of 2005. Should these programs be eliminated?
NSF Education Funding
The FY07 budget increases the Education and Human Resources (EHR) Directorate at NSF by 2.5 percent to $816 million. While this is a significant improvement over the FY06 request of $737 million, it is still below the FY04 level of $938
million. Within the proposal, elementary, secondary and undergraduate education
programs are reduced, while graduate education and human resource development
programs are increased. No money for new grants is proposed for the Math and
Science Partnership Program, which the Administration seeks to phase out at NSF,
while preserving the program at the Department of Education. Is the funding for
NSF education programs adequate, and what is NSFs role in science and
math education compared to that of the Department of Education?
Technology Programs at NIST
While the internal programs of NIST receive healthy increases in the Presidents
budget, the budget proposes again to eliminate the Advanced Technology Program
(ATP), which funds research at private firms, and to halve the budget for the Manufacturing Extension Partnership program (MEP), which runs centers across the
country to counsel smaller companies. Both programs were created by Congress in
1988. MEP centers generally receive one-third of their funding from the Federal
Government, with the remainder equally divided between states and fees charged
to companies that use the centers. Should ATP be eliminated? Can MEP function effectively with sharply reduced federal funding? How high a priority
are they compared to other government activities designed to promote applied technology development and U.S. manufacturing competitiveness?
5. Interagency Research Activities
Budget tables for select interagency programs are provided in Appendix I. The Administration has not proposed any new interagency R&D initiatives for FY07.
National Nanotechnology Initiative (NNI): Between FY01 and FY06, spending
on federal nanotechnology R&D has nearly tripled, rising from $464 million in FY01
to $1.3 billion in FY06. The FY07 budget requests an estimated $1.28 billion for the
program in FY07, a decrease of $24 million, or 1.8 percent, from the estimated FY06
level.4 Requested funding for the five agencies5 authorized in the 21st Century
Nanotechnology Research and Development Act (P.L. 108153) is $751 million, a
10.1 percent increase over the FY06 level, but below the $955 million authorized
for these agencies for FY07 in the Act. Of particular note is the proposed near doubling of funding, from $5 million to $9 million, for EPA to work on potential environmental and safety issues associated with nanotechnology. The Committee held a
hearing in the fall at which both industry and environmental groups called for increased research on the potential environmental consequences of nanotechnology.
Networking and Information Technology R&D (NITRD): NITRD is an interagency program coordinating information technology (IT) R&D across twelve agencies. Areas of emphasis include high-end computing systems and software, networking, software design, and human-computer interaction. In addition, for the first
time in FY07, cyber security and information assurance research activities will be
included in the interagency coordination effort. Information technology research has
played a critical role in U.S. economic strength over the past several decades, and
consistent with the Presidents prioritization of areas that impact U.S. competitiveness, the budget request recommends $3.07 billion for NITRD programs in FY07,
a 7.7 percent increase over FY06. A significant part of that increase is designated
4 The Administration notes that the FY06 NNI funding includes over $100 million in earmarks
at DOD and over $10 million in earmarks at NASA. When those are removed, the request for
NNI is for an increase of 7.2 percent.
5 The five agencies authorized by the Act are: NSF, DOE, NASA, EPA, and NIST. The total
funding authorized by the Act for these agencies is $3.7 billion over four years.

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for expanded work on high-performance computing at NSF, the DOE Office of
Science, and NOAA.
Cyber Security R&D: Significant increases are requested for cyber security R&D
programs in FY07 at NSF, NIST, and DHS. While funding for cyber security activities at NSF and NIST is still below the levels authorized in the Cyber Security Research and Development Act (P.L. 107305),6 both agencies have directed considerable portions of their overall increases to their cyber security research programs. At
NSF, the budget requests $94 million for cyber security R&D (up 27 percent), and
keeps cyber security-focused education programs flat at $14 million. At NIST, the
request is $21 million for cyber security R&D (up 11 percent from FY06). Within
a flat budget at the DHS Science and Technology (S&T) Directorate, the cyber security R&D program was one of a very few programs in which funding is requested
to start new projects in FY07; the budget proposes $24.9 million for cyber security
R&D, up 50 percent from the FY06 level.7
Climate Change Research: The FY07 budget requests $1.7 billion for the interagency Climate Change Science Program (CCSP), about the same level as enacted
in FY06. There is an $18 million (two percent) decrease in NASAs contribution to
CCSP, offset primarily by a $23 million (14 percent) increase in NOAA and a $5
million (four percent) decrease in DOEs contributions to the program. The request
for CCSP includes $200 million for the interagency Climate Change Research Initiative (CCRI), about the same level as enacted in FY06. CCRI is intended to target
critical scientific uncertainties and deliver results in three to five years.
The National Earthquake Hazard Reduction Program (NEHRP): NEHRP is
an interagency effort aimed at reducing earthquake hazards through activities such
as seismic and engineering research, earthquake monitoring, and code development
and adoption. It includes NIST, NSF, the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS), and the
Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA). While the complete NEHRP
budget for FY07 is not currently available, NIST requests $1.7 million (up $0.8 million), NSF requests $54.7 million (up $1.0 million), and USGS requests $55.4 million
(up $1.6 million) for earthquake activities. Included in the USGS NEHRP budget
is $8.1 million for the Advanced National Seismic System (ANSS). The FEMA request is not available.8 NIST is the lead agency for NEHRP and it is funded at
about $10 million below the authorized level.
The National Windstorm Impact Reduction Program (NWIRP): NWIRP, authorized in October 2004, is an interagency effort to improve scientific understanding of wind hazards and developing cost-effective measures to reduce their impact on lives and property through atmospheric research, code development, and
creation of risk assessment tools. The participating agencies include NSF, NIST,
FEMA, and NOAA. While a plan for program implementation was due to Congress
in October 2005, it has not yet been received, and proposed spending levels for this
program in FY07 have not been provided to the Committee. The authorized appropriations for FY07 total $25 million$9.4 million for FEMA, $9.4 million for NSF,
$4 million for NIST, and $2.2 million for NOAA.
6. Agency R&D Highlights
Department of Energy (DOE)
The FY07 request for civilian R&D at DOE of $6.3 billion represents an increase
of nine percent9 from FY06 enacted levels. The Administrations top funding priorities are the Office of Science and nuclear energy research focused on reprocessing
of nuclear waste to reduce its toxicity, make more fuel available for future use, and
reduce the volume of waste requiring disposal.
6 For FY07, NSF cyber security programs are authorized at $142 million and NIST cyber security programs are authorized at $92 million.
7 DHS also supports operational cyber security programs, such as tracking computer and network vulnerabilities and coordinating the monitoring of government networks for cyber incidents. Located in the National Cyber Security Division of the DHS Preparedness Directorate,
operational cyber security receives $92 million in FY07, the same as in FY06.
8 The NEHRP agencies are authorized to receive a total of $160.55 million in FY07, including
$12.10 million for NIST, $40.31 million for NSF, $22.28 million for FEMA, and $85.86 million
for USGS (of which $36 million is designated for the ANSS).
9 These figures do not include a proposed cancellation of balances in the dormant Clean Coal
Technology account.

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Office of Science
As part of the American Competitiveness Initiative, the budget requests $4.1 billion for the Office of Science, an increase of $505 million or 14 percent. The budget
seeks to strike a balance between support for researchers (45 percent) and the operation of national scientific user facilities (38 percent). Major increases in research
support are provided for university-based nuclear physics (up 17 percent to $64.5
million), the development of advanced computing software (up 51 percent to $50 million) and research at the nanoscale (up 62 percent to $158 million). Office of Science
funding for the Presidents Hydrogen Fuel Initiative increases 54 percent to $50 million.
Funding requested for facility operations allows the Office of Science to operate
its suite of scientific user facilities at 96 percent of the optimal number of operating
hours, compared to 88 percent in FY06. The request also allows DOE to bring into
full operation the new Spallation Neutron Source and four of five new Nanoscale
Science Research Centers. An additional $20 million is provided for project engineering and design for the National Synchrotron Light Source II project at Brookhaven
National Laboratory. In addition, resources are nearly doubled from $54 million to
$102 million to acquire and upgrade the leadership computing facilities at Oak
Ridge National Laboratory and Argonne National Laboratory.
The budget requests neither R&D nor construction funding explicitly for the Rare
Isotope Accelerator (RIA), a nuclear physics facility accorded relatively high priority
in the Office of Sciences 20-year facilities plan. The budget does request $4 million
to continue exotic beam R&D, which are the capabilities RIA or a RIA-like machine
would deliver.
The request includes $60 million for FY07 in the Fusion program for ITER, an
international partnership to build a large-scale fusion reactor. A significant fraction
of that $60 million is a research effort at domestic fusion facilities in support of the
ITER program. Direct ITER project costs are slated to increase only $21 million,
while the Fusion program overall increases $31 million. The request provides fusion
facilities with 51 percent of optimal operating hours.
The request for Biological and Environmental Research (BER) program is the only
major program area in the Office of Science with a cut: the requested budget declines $70 million, or 12 percent. However, the request for BER rises to $510 million, a $59 million (13 percent) increase after deducting $130 million of FY06 Congressional earmark. Within BER, climate change research is reduced $6.6 million,
including reductions to ocean carbon sequestration research (down $4.9 million) and
climate modeling (down $1.5 million).
Applied Energy Programs
The FY07 request for applied energy programs reflects a series of trade-offs to accommodate the Advanced Energy Initiative. Overall, in ongoing accounts,10 the
budget for applied energy programs increases one percent or $17 million, from $2.14
billion to $2.16 billion. The Nuclear Energy program shows the largest increases,
the Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy program is flat, and the Fossil Energy
and Electricity Distribution and Energy Reliability programs both are proposed for
funding reductions.
In the Office of Nuclear Energy, after some accounting changes in infrastructure
are included, total funding for programs in the jurisdiction of the Science Committee
increases $95 million, or 21 percent to $554 million. The biggest funding increase
occurs in the Advanced Fuel Cycle Initiative (AFCI), which is tripled from $79 million to $243 million. AFCI is the program to develop fuel reprocessing and recycling
technology, and therefore a key component of the Global Nuclear Energy Partnership (see below). Conversely, university support, previously funded at $27 million,
is terminated; Generation IV is down by $23 million (down 42 percent to $31 million), including a $16.6 million cut to the Next Generation Nuclear Plant. Nuclear
hydrogen R&D also is cut by $6 million (down 25 percent to $19 million). The Nuclear Energy office is now responsible for all of Idaho facilities management, which
is cut by $4 million (down four percent to $95.3 million). Radiological facilities management is cut $4.3 million (down eight percent to $50 million).
DOE also announced the creation of the Global Nuclear Energy Partnership
(GNEP), a program to promote the use of nuclear power worldwide. The program
would manage nuclear fuel through international agreements as a strategy to reduce proliferation risks. GNEP also will include a domestic nuclear fuel reprocessing
and recycling component to reduce the need for additional long-term waste storage
10 The budget proposes to rescind $203 balances in the old Clean Coal Technology account.
The statutory authority for this account does not permit new project starts, but a similar demonstration program in the Fossil Energy R&D account has been active for several years.

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capacity. While the GNEP activities will be carried out in various programs
throughout DOE, the major new funding effort is directed toward accelerating activities in AFCI.
There are major shifts in the Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy
(EERE), which overall sees an increase of 0.2 percent (up $3 million to $1,176 million). However, R&D programs are up $81 million (up nine percent to $1,012 million). Reflecting new initiatives announced in the State of the Union address, Solar
Energy programs are slated for a $65 million increase (up 78 percent to $148 million), Biomass programs would increase $58 million (up 65 percent to $150 million),
Hydrogen programs would increase $40 million (up 26 percent to $196 million), and
Wind programs would increase $5 million (up 13 percent to $44 million).
The other item mentioned in the State of the Union, battery research for plugin hybrids, standard hybrids, and fuel cell vehicles, increases $6.2 million (up 427
percent to $7.6 million), but overall funding for Vehicle research is slated to decrease.
On the Energy Efficiency side, research programs face a proposed total decrease
of $36 million (down 11 percent to $289 million). In the largest single cut in EERE,
weatherization grants are cut $78 million (down 32 percent to $164 million). This
program is not an R&D program, but improves energy efficiency in low-income
homes; the reduction will amount to about 30,000 fewer homes being weatherized
in FY07. The Vehicles budget is proposed to be cut $23 million (down 12 percent
to $166 million); the Buildings budget is proposed to be cut $2 million (down two
percent to $77 million); and the Industries budget is proposed to be cut $11 million
(down 20 percent to $46 million).
Looking at subaccounts, the largest reduction in Vehicles R&D is to earmarked
projects; Materials Technology is proposed to be reduced and as is much of the work
on Heavy Vehicles throughout the program. In Buildings, there is a proposed $4
million increase in Building America (program with a goal to achieve zero energy
homes by 2020) and a proposed $1.2 million increase to commercial buildings R&D;
decreases come from a cancellation of earmarks and some redistribution of other
funds.
In the Office of Fossil Energy, the R&D account is proposed to be cut $122 million
from FY06 levels (down 21 percent to $470 million) with the majority of the savings
from the proposed termination of the Natural Gas Technology and Oil Technology
programs ($33 million and $32 million in FY06 respectively). An additional $44 million reduction (down 90 percent to $5 million) is proposed in funding for the Clean
Coal Power demonstration program. DOE has explained this reduction by noting
that there is over $500 million allocated to the program in prior years, most of
which has not yet been spent. This reduction is characterized as temporary, so that
the program can take steps to improve the use of funds already provided for
projects. In addition to the cancellation of the Oil and Gas technology programs,
the budget proposes to repeal the Ultra-Deepwater and Unconventional Natural Gas
and Other Petroleum Research program through a future legislative proposal, consistent with the decision to terminate the discretionary Oil and Gas programs. This
program was passed as part of the Energy Policy Act of 2005; the proposal would
result in the rescission of a projected $50 million in mandatory funding.
The Office of Electricity Delivery and Energy Reliability was again substantially
reorganized and then cut $37 million (down 23 percent to $125 million) with the
R&D programs taking the lions share of the cuts, down $40 million (down 30 percent to $96 million). These programs include superconductivity research, power grid
reliability and research on distributed energy systems.

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National Science Foundation (NSF)


The National Science Foundation is the primary source of federal funding for nonmedical basic research conducted at colleges and universities and serves as a catalyst for science, technology, engineering, and mathematics education reform at all
levels. As previously mentioned, NSF is one of the research agencies that the President has proposed to double over the next 10 years as part of the American Competitiveness Initiative. The FY07 budget request for NSF, therefore, is $6.02 billion, an
increase of 7.9 percent, or $439 million over the FY06 level.
The funding increase in the FY07 budget mainly goes to scientific research programs and research facilities and is spread fairly evenly among all fields NSF supports, including engineering, non-biomedical life sciences, physics, and geosciences.
New programs begun with the increased research funding include $50 million to
begin the acquisition of a leadership-class high performance computer and $20 million requested to support leading edge sensor and related research to help predict
and detect explosives and related threats. Some of the new funding is allotted to
the expansion of existing high-priority programs, such as a $29 million increase for
nanotechnology research and $20 million increase for cyber security research. For
research facilities, the account that funds construction of large user facilities increases by $50 million, and NSF requests funding to begin building three new facilities.11 Finally, the overall funding increase allows NSF to request $50 million in additional funds for various research and education initiatives associated with the
International Polar Year, an international activity for which NSF is the lead U.S.
agency.
As noted above, the FY07 budget requests an increase (2.5 percent) for the Education and Human Resources (EHR) Directorate, bringing the total funding to $816
million. Additional funds are proposed for graduate education, human resource development (activities to broaden participation in STEM fields), and the new Discovery Research K12 (DK12) program, which will focus on the grand challenges
11 Funding ($81 million) is requested to start construction on Alaska Region Research Vessel
(ARRV), Ocean Observatories Initiative (OOI), and National Ecological Observatory Network
(NEON). (NSF has requested funding for NEON in past budgets, but no construction funding
has been appropriated to date.)

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in education, such as the development of quality math and science assessments and
the translation of cutting edge research into classroom practice. K12 and undergraduate education programs would be reduced.
In FY06, the responsibility for the costs of the icebreakers that support scientific
research in the polar regions was transferred to NSF from the U.S. Coast Guard,
and the budget request proposes that NSF continue in this role in FY07. The actual
cost for services and ship maintenance will be negotiated with the Coast Guard, but
the estimated cost is $57 million for FY07 (a slight decrease from FY06); this money
will all be transferred back to the Coast Guard. In addition, NSF plans to, as in
FY06, purchase ice-breaking services on the open market for an additional cost of
roughly $10 million.
NSF continues to receive high marks from the Office of Management and Budget
for the quality of its management and the excellence of its programs. NSF is one
of only three agencies (of the 26 evaluated) to be awarded at least four green lights
on the Executive Branch Management Scorecard, which rates agencies with green,
yellow and red lights in areas such as financial management, e-government, and
human capital management. In addition, ten NSF programs have been examined to
date using the Program Assessment Rating Tool (PART),12 and all ten programs received ratings of effective, the highest possible rating. NSF remains the only agency in the Federal Government to receive the highest rating on every program that
was PART-ed.
Issues/Questions Raised by the FY07 Request for NSF
Education and Human Resource (EHR) Directorate
The increase (2.5 percent) for the EHR Directorate is not distributed evenly
among the variety of education areas supported by NSF. In graduate education, increased funding will enable NSF to maintain its current stipend of $30,000 for top
graduate students and further broaden participation in these programs, and the proposed $26 million increase for human resource development will provide expanded
support for programs and activities that expand opportunities for traditionally
under-served populations. The Math and Science Partnership (MSP) Program, envisioned as part of the Presidents No Child Left Behind Initiative and enacted by the
NSF Authorization Act of 2002, continues to decline, from $140 million in FY04 to
$46 million in FY07. Without additional resources, the amount proposed will be
used to fund existing grants only.
NSF reorganized the EHR Directorate in FY06, masking some additional downward funding trends. Specifically, while a notable increase ($11 million) is proposed
for a newly formed DK12 program, the three K12 programs13 that were merged
into DK12 suffered significant cuts from FY05 to FY06. This years proposed increase does little to restore those reductions. In addition, research and evaluation
activities14 have declined each of the past two years and are down $25 million overall. Finally, undergraduate education programs have also declined over the same period. While workforce development programs, such as the Advanced Technological
Education, Noyce Scholarships, and STEP (a.k.a. Tech Talent), have grown slightly,
capacity-building programs have fallen appreciably in the past two years-for example, the Curriculum, Course, and Laboratory Improvement program would decline
by $8 million between FY05 and FY07.

12 PART is described by the budget as a tool developed to assess and improve program performance so that the Federal Government can achieve better results. A PART review helps identify a programs strengths and weaknesses to inform funding and management decisions aimed
at making the program more effective.
13 The Instructional Materials Development Program, the Teacher Professional Continuum
Program, and the Centers for Learning and Teaching Program were combined to form the new
Discovery Research K12 (DK12) Program in FY06.
14 Research and evaluation activities refer to the Research, Evaluation and Communication
Program (REC), which was renamed the Research and Evaluation on Education in Science and
Engineering (REESE) and shifted from a stand-alone program into the new Division of Research
on Learning in Formal and Informal Settings (DRL).

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Homeland Security R&D


Homeland Security R&D at the Department of Homeland Security (DHS)
The vast majority of R&D at DHS is funded by the Science and Technology (S&T)
directorate. Proposed funding for S&T is $1.0 billion, a decrease of $485 million (33
percent) below the FY06 enacted level. This decrease reflects the transfer of almost
all nuclear and radiological programs to the Domestic Nuclear Detection Office
(DNDO), which reports directly to the Secretary. In addition, the program to develop
countermeasures to shoulder-fired anti-aircraft missiles will be concluding in FY07.
Accounting for these changes, the FY07 request is a $47 million reduction (4.5 percent) from FY06.
S&T directorate funding is split among various technical portfolio areas, such as
biological countermeasures, standards, critical infrastructure protection, and support of DHS component agencies (such as Customs and Border Protection and the

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U.S. Secret Service). A complete list of portfolios and their funding is provided in
Table 4.
Within the relatively flat budget, a few new initiatives are proposed. An additional $8.3 million is proposed for cyber security R&D for Internet security projects,
cyber security testbeds and data sets, and research on identity management. Also,
a Joint Agro-Terror Defense Office will be created within the Biological Countermeasures portfolio to enhance the interagency coordination of advanced development of agro-defense countermeasures.
A number of portfolios will receive significant decreases. Of greatest concern is the
23 percent decrease in the Standards portfolio, which is responsible for activities
that include coordinating the development of metrics for equipment performance
and certification, protocols for testing and training, and evaluation of equipment.
This decrease will hamper DHSs ability to provide standards and guidelines for existing commercial technologies as well as for novel products being developed by
other DHS programs. Another area being cut deeply is the Emergent and
Prototypical Technologies portfolio, a combination of basic research on emerging
threats and rapid prototyping of new technologies. The $18 million (41 percent) decrease in this portfolio will limit DHSs ability to tackle potential threats outside
the existing portfolios, perform basic research for vulnerability characterization and
countermeasure identification, and quickly address DHS-specific requirements for
technologies.
Despite the decrease in funding for the DHS S&T directorate, the overall funding
devoted to R&D at DHS does not drop appreciably, as a substantial increase is requested for DNDO (up $221 million). DNDO now includes all the radiological and
nuclear countermeasures activities formerly within DHS S&T, including development and evaluation of detection equipment and forensics, attribution, and standards programs. Of the $536 million requested for DNDO for FY07, $103 million ($46
million above the FY06 level) is for transformational research and development
projects to be conducted at universities and national laboratories and in industry.
Homeland Security R&D at Other Agencies
Approximately $3.4 billion is proposed for homeland security R&D programs in
departments and agencies outside of DHS (Table 10). The bulk of this funding, $1.8
billion (up 6.3 percent from FY06), is for bio-defense programs at NIH, such as basic
research on infectious microbial agents, applied research on diagnostics, vaccines,
and therapeutics, and construction of bio-containment facilities. The remaining
funds (approximately $1.7 billion) go to a number of other agencies, such as: EPA,
which has been sharply increasing its funding for research on detection of chemical
and biological agents in the water supply, microbial risk assessment and environmental decontamination; NSF, for research related to critical infrastructure protection, microbial genomics, and a new program for sensor technologies; the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA), for research on animal disease diagnostics and
vaccines; DOD for detection systems, protective gear, and medical countermeasures
for biological and chemical agents; and DOEs National Nuclear Security Administration for research on detection and attribution of radiological and nuclear materials.
In addition to individual agency programs, a number of cooperative efforts between DHS and other agencies exist: NSF and DHS jointly fund a cyber security
testbed; DHS provides funding to NIST for standards work in a number of areas,
such as standards for radiation detectors; and EPA and DHS co-fund a university
center on microbial risk assessment.
Issues/Questions Raised by the FY07 Request for DHS
Balance of DHS S&T Programs: Most of the work of the S&T directorate is heavily weighted toward development. Relatively little goes to fund longer-term, more
basic research. As a result, relatively little of the funding is available to universities, although DHS S&T does fund several university centers. Whether this shorter-range focus is optimal for U.S. long-term security has been a matter of debate.
Priorities across Threat Areas: DHS S&T has to balance research priorities
across a wide range of different kinds of threatsfrom cyber attacks to dirty bombs
to foot and mouth diseaseas well as supporting technology adoption in a wide variety of environments, including new inter-operable communications systems for
first responders and stand-alone laboratories that can safely receive and identify unknown hazardous substances. Yet for the first time since DHS was formed in FY03,
funding for the S&T directorate has decreased. In these circumstances, robust risk
assessment methodologies both within and across portfolios are needed.

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National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST)


NISTs Laboratory Programs
The FY07 budget requests $467 million for a wide range of research conducted
at NIST laboratories in Gaithersburg, Maryland, and Boulder, Colorado. The request is $67 million (17 percent) above the FY06 enacted level of $399 million and
is $41 million above the FY06 request. The request also includes $68 million for construction and renovation of NISTs scientific facilities.
The increase in laboratory programs for FY07 comprises 12 initiatives that span
a range of scientific and engineering disciplines. Two of the initiatives are major upgrades and enhancements of NIST national research facilities: the NIST Center for
Neutron Research (NCNR) and the Center for Nanoscale Research and Technology
(CNRT, located within NISTs Advanced Measurements Laboratory). One initiative
is to expand NISTs existing presence at the National Synchrotron Light Source
(NSLS) at Brookhaven National Laboratory. The other nine initiatives are increases
to NIST laboratory and technical programs that are directed at solving measurement and other technical problems in energy, medical technology, manufacturing,
homeland security, and public safety.

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Issues/Questions Raised by the FY07 Request for NIST
Impact of Proposed Elimination of the Advanced Technology Program
(ATP): The FY07 budget request proposes to eliminate ATP (funded at $80 million
in FY06). Moreover, ATP funded an estimated $8 million worth of R&D conducted
at the NIST laboratories in FY06. Therefore, the proposal to end ATP could result
in a reduction in research funding to the NIST laboratories, eating up a portion of
the proposed increase under the American Competitiveness Initiative.
Impact of Scaling Back the Manufacturing Extension Partnership (MEP)
Program: The FY07 request for MEP is $46.3 million, which represents a 56 percent cut from the FY06 enacted level of $106 million. At this level, it is unclear how
the MEP program would function as a national network.

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National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA)
The FY07 budget requests $3.7 billion for NOAA, a decrease of $227 million (six
percent) compared to the FY06 enacted level of $3.9 billion. However, NOAAs FY06
budget includes approximately $600 million worth of earmarked projects. If these
earmarks are removed from the FY06 baseline, then the Presidents budget could
be construed as proposing an additional $345 million (10 percent increase) for
NOAA in FY07.
National Weather Service
The FY07 budget requests $882 million for the National Weather Service (NWS),
an increase of $33.6 million (four percent). The increase includes $29 million to develop, operate, and maintain a variety of warning and forecast systems such as the
Tsunami Warning Program, the Air Quality Forecasting Program, and the Wind
Profiler Network which improves tornado, severe storm, and flash flood forecasting.
Satellite Acquisition
The FY07 budget requests $1.03 billion for satellite programs at NOAA, an $82
million (8.6 percent) increase over the FY06 enacted level of $952 million. The proposed increase is for procurement and construction of the next generation of geostationary and polar weather satellites, and it is in line with the original budget
plans for these satellite systems. In FY07, NOAA expects to let the prime contract
for its next generation of geostationary satellites, GOESR. The geostationary satellites provide a constant watch for severe weather conditions such as tornadoes,
flash floods, hail storms, and hurricanes, and they are important for short-term (between real-time and two days) weather forecasts. In contrast, NOAAs polar-weather
satellites are essential for long-term (between three and seven days) weather forecasts, tracking of severe weather, and climate observations.
Hurricane Research
The FY07 budget includes requests for $13 million for high performance computing (a 100 percent or $6.5 million increase over FY06 enacted levels) and also
includes $2.5 million in new funds to accelerate hurricane research programs. Both
requests will help NOAA improve its hurricane forecast models, in particular, its
models of hurricane intensity.
Issues/Questions Raised by the FY07 Request for NOAA
Weather Satellite Program Management: NOAAs next generation polar weather satellite program, National Polar-orbiting Operational Environmental Satellite
System (NPOESS), is currently running as much as $3 billion (more than 25 percent) over budget and as many as three years behind schedule. Since NPOESS is
a joint NOAADOD program, this large cost increase triggered a review under the
DODs Nunn-McCurdy process. The review will finish in May or June. Currently,
no increased funding is anticipated (or requested) in the FY07 budget as a result
of the review, but increased funding will be required in future years. This could
force NOAA to take resources away from other important missions at the agency.

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7. Witnesses Questions
All of the witnesses have been asked to:
1. Review the R&D budget request in the context of the Administrations overall priorities in science and technology.
2. Describe the mechanisms that the Administration uses to determine priorities across scientific disciplines.
3. Describe the mechanisms the Administration uses to coordinate its scientific
research and technical development activities with other federal agencies.
In addition, Dr. Bodman has been asked to:
1. Describe how the budget request will contribute to the development of climate change technologies.

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Chairman BOEHLERT. This hearing will come to order. I want to
welcome everyone here today for our first hearing of the new year,
which is also the first hearing in Congress to bring together all the
research agencies that will be participating in the American Competitiveness Initiative. I want everyone in this room and everyone
viewing this hearing to remember that phrase, American Competitiveness Initiative. This is one of the most important topics that
can be discussed at any place at any time.
It is a rare thing to think of a budget hearing as a time of celebration, but I think that thats how we should view this mornings
proceedings. For a long time, a long time, many of us, particularly
on this committee, have been calling for a renewed emphasis on research in the physical sciences. The commitment that would be
demonstrated, not with rhetorical feints, but with genuine investments. The eloquent words in the State of the Union, recited by the
President of the United States, had to be followed by meaningful
deeds, when the budget was submitted by the Congress and the
American people, and they were.
Perhaps more importantly, the Nations leaders in industry and
higher education have been calling for such an investment, because
they see it as a must, if the United States is to retain its competitive edge. One might say that there has been a gathering storm of
lobbying on this subject, as an increasing number of leaders have
issued thundering statements about the need to rethink our research and education and energy policies. But now that the storm
can abate a bit, or at least blow over Capitol Hill, because in the
Executive Branch our words have been heard and they have been
heeded. And I want especially to thank Dr. Jack Marburger and
Secretary Sam Bodman for their tireless efforts to bring the American Competitiveness Initiative into being. I have to say to Secretary Bodman that I didnt think Id ever see a cabinet officer
have such an immediate visible and positive impact on a department. I salute you, sir.
And let me just tell everyone, theres a new dynamic and we
should all be thrilled with that new dynamic. In the past, the
Science Committee would beat a path to a door of the decisionmakers and say you must, absolutely must, invest more in science
on the part of the United States Government. And we would say
to those same leaders of government, you must, you must invest
more and do it better in providing quality educational training,
starting at the very earliest level in science and math. You must
do that.
And then people like Tom Friedman issue a book and goes to
number one in the bestseller list. But the new dynamic is this: its
not just those of us on the Science Committee promoting science,
or scientists promoting science, because the people on the other end
listening, say well, thats sort of self-serving. You want to broaden
your portfolio. Or youre after your special interest. And its not just
the education people saying we must invest more in K through 12
science and math education. Theyd say well, youve got vested interest. The new dynamic is that the business community is providing leadership. They are engaged, in a sense Rising Above the
Gathering Storm, that outstanding report issued by the National
Academy of Science. Business all over is saying you know what?

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Weve got to be involved. And you know what? They have to be involved, and the good news is that they are, so I couldnt be happier.
Now its our job in Congress to follow through. Were calling for
leadership, but there better darn well be followership, because
weve got to be on the same page and weve got to move forward
and I think we will. I know that everyone on this committee will
be devoted to that effort. Weve already been in contact with our
colleagues on the Appropriations Committee, and Chairman Wolf
and Chairman Hobson share our enthusiasm, and I couldnt be
happier about that. How refreshing it is for veterans of Capitol Hill
to look up here and to see authorizers and appropriators marching
hand in hand in common cause. That is really refreshing. We all
understand that the future employment and prosperity of the
American people are at stake. In my speeches around the country,
I say the same thing: were still number one. Thats a position I
like, but we used to be so far ahead of the others that when we
looked over our shoulder, the second and third place and beyond
were way back. We could hardly see them even with binoculars.
Now we cant take a nanosecond to just glance over our shoulder,
because the competition is breathing down our neck. And boy, if
thats not a signal, I dont know what is. So weve got to move and
Im confident we will.
On this committee, we will also pass and enact whatever authorizing legislation will help make the proposed funding a reality both
this year and years to come. Thats a pledge. Thats a commitment
and its not just from me, and its not just a Republican Chairman,
where the Republicans enjoy the majority. Its the Democrats, with
Congressman Gordon providing real leadership. Were all working
together in common cause and that is very, very helpful. But I
dont want to pass bills that are a laundry list of new or duplicative
programs that will never come into being. I want to focus on a few
key issues and programs that will help promote and wisely use additional appropriations, and Im sure that well be working more
publicly on all this next month.
In developing legislation and a hearing agenda, we will be looking at the Advanced Energy Initiative as well as the American
Competitiveness Initiative. The Energy Initiative is just as important and just as promising as the efforts to increase research funding in the basic sciences, but I remain concerned that our nation
still lacks a sensible energy policy. We still havent got it right, in
my estimation, and we need to get beyond the illusion that pouring
money into technology development, which we need to do, is
enough to transform our energy portfolio. The market will not adequately value a collective need to become more energy independent
before prices become intolerable. So the Energy Initiative is a necessary but hardly sufficient step in the right direction.
Now while todays hearing is a celebration, I dont want to leave
the impression that there are no problems with the proposed budget. Keep in mind, Im from the Legislative Branch. We want to
have our say. I expect that Mr. Gordon wont leave that impression
any way, but I do have concerns, such as the inadequate funding
for education programs at the National Science Foundation. Weve
got to deal with that. But we can get to those in questions and in
other statements, and I wont belabor those points now. I think its

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important that our main message this morning be one of victory,
because we need to communicate that message to our colleagues
concerning the American Competitiveness Initiative in reality.
Were not going to declare victory and go home. Were not going to
put up a sign, mission accomplished. Rather, we need to think of
it this way: we won the battle and now its time to win the war.
I look forward to working with todays witnesses and with all of
my colleagues to do just that, and I thank you for your indulgence.
I went over my five-minute limit, but I have the advantage of being
the Chair and I control the clock. Mr. Gordon.
[The prepared statement of Chairman Boehlert follows:]
PREPARED STATEMENT

OF

CHAIRMAN SHERWOOD L. BOEHLERT

I want to welcome everybody here today for our first hearing of the year, which
is also the first hearing in Congress to bring together all the research agencies that
will be participating in the American Competitiveness Initiative.
Its a rare thing to think of a budget hearing as a time of celebration, but I think
that thats how we should view this mornings proceedings. For a long time, many
of us have been calling for a renewed emphasis on research in the physical
sciencesa commitment that would be demonstrated not with rhetorical feints, but
with genuine investments.
Perhaps more importantly, the Nations leaders in industry and higher education
have been calling for such an investment because they see it as a must if the
United States is to retain its competitive edge. One might say that there has been
a gathering storm of lobbying on this subject, as an increasing number of leaders
have issued thundering statements about the need to rethink our research and education and energy policies.
But now that storm can abate a bitor at least blow over to Capitol Hillbecause
in the Executive Branch our words have been heard and they have been heeded.
And I want especially to thank Dr. Marburger and Secretary Bodman for their tireless efforts to bring the American Competitiveness Initiative into being. I have to
say to Secretary Bodman that I dont think I ever seen a cabinet officer have such
an immediate, visible and positive impact on a department.
Now its our job in Congress to follow through. And I think we will. I know that
everyone on this committee will be devoted to that effort. We have already been in
contact with our colleagues on the Appropriations Committee, and Chairman Wolf
and Chairman Hobson share our enthusiasmwhich should come as no surprise
given their longstanding positions on science funding. We all understand that the
future employment and prosperity of the American people are at stake.
On this committee, we will also pass and enact whatever authorizing legislation
will help make the proposed funding a reality both this year and in years to come,
and whatever legislation will help ensure that any additional funds are spent as
wisely as possible. We are currently reviewing all the ideas that have been offered
up around this town, as well as our own, and we will develop bipartisan legislation
on funding, education and energy.
But I dont want to pass bills that are laundry lists of new or duplicative programs that will never come into being. I want to focus on a few key ideas and programs that will help promote and wisely use additional appropriations. And Im sure
that well be working more publicly on all of this next month.
In developing legislation and a hearing agenda, we will be looking at the Advanced Energy Initiative as well as the American Competitiveness Initiative. The
energy initiative is just as important and just as promising as the effort to increase
research funding in the basic sciences.
But I remain concerned that our nation still lacks a sensible energy policy, and
we need to get beyond the illusion that pouring money into technology developmentwhich we need to dois enough to transform our energy portfolio. The market will not adequately value the collective need to become more energy independent
before prices become intolerable. So the energy initiative is a necessary, but hardly
sufficient step in the right direction.
Now while todays hearing is a celebration, I dont want to leave the impression
that there are no problems with the proposed budget. I expect that Mr. Gordon
wont leave that impression anyway. But I do have concerns, such as the inadequate
funding for education programs at the National Science Foundation (NSF). But we

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can get to those in questions and in other statements, and I wont belabor those
points now.
I think its important that our main message this morning be one of victory because we need to communicate that message to our colleagues to turn the American
Competitiveness Initiative into reality. Were not going to declare victory and go
home. Rather, we need to think of it this way: weve won the battle, now its time
to win the war.
I look forward to working with todays witnesses and with all my colleagues to
do just that. Thank you.

Mr. GORDON. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Let me first compliment


you on your very sincere passion and energy into this competitive
agenda. You have been tireless in yournot only your rhetoric, but
also trying to make things happen, and I say that sincerely. I also
share your concerns about the lack of funding, in terms of the K
to 12 science portion, for education, within the NSF, but simply
looking at this budget, I cant share your optimism. I am concerned
that were going to have a situation similar to when the President
rolled out his lunar Mars mission. It was a big splash one day, but
then the money didnt come and we havent heard anything about
it since. So I guess, what did yourour President say, for us to
verify? I think were going to have to do our part to try to verify
and make sure that there is follow up. So I want to join you in welcoming our distinguished panel to this mornings hearing. Im glad
to see all of you again. However, I think its unfortunate that we
have all of you here for just one day of hearings. Im afraid that
the Committee is once again acquiescing its oversight responsibility
not holding individual hearings for each of the five important agencies before us today.
The good in this budget request is the proposed increase in the
Federal R&D. The bad news is that that increase is less than the
projected rate of inflation. So once again were investing less than
the rate of inflation at a time when many of our international competitors are increasing their investment in science and technology
at faster rates than ever before. Even more alarming is the fact
that the Administrations science and technology investment is actually decreasing. The Federal S&T budget is the best method to
evaluate research funding. S&T represents the amount of funding
directed toward creation of new knowledge and technologies as opposed to development activities. Dr. Marburger himself has stated
that the Federal R&D is an imperfect measure of evaluating
science and technology funding, and most agree that the S&T is
the correct metric.
A lot of numbers will be thrown around this morning to put a
pretty face on the budget, but the fact of the matter is that the Administrations own table, 52, clearly shows, and Ill show you here,
a one percent decrease in the Federal S&T investment for fiscal
year 2007. And knowing the fact and being aware that Dr.
Marburgers statements in recent budget hearings, in the spirit of
the Olympics, Dr. Marburger, I would like to nominate you for a
gold medal. The category would be statistical gymnastics for making a one percent decrease look like a one percent increase, despite
the fact that its almost $600 million less than fiscal year 2006
funding and $1 billion less than the Administration requested last
year, according to their own budget document. So in the same
breath, the Administration decries the earmarks in last years

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budget, but then counts earmarks when showing how much the
S&T budget has increased during the Administration, from 2001 to
2007.
As for the National Science Foundation fiscal year 2007 funding,
Im very pleased that the Administration has proposed an eight
percent increase. In 2002 the Congress passed and the President
signed into law an authorization bill doubling NSF funding over
five years. However, the Presidents request for NSF since that
signing ceremony are still $3.8 billion short of that commitment.
And when we dig deeper, we find, at least in my opinion, misguided priorities. I was very disappointed to see a continued de-emphasis of the K to 12 science education at the National Science
Foundation. Even as the NSF budget grows, the Administration
proposes a seven percent cut to the K to 12 programs, on top of already 37 percent cuts. NSF has been a leader in improving science
and math education for over 50 years. I do not understand how ignoring NSFs expertise in education helps our competitiveness.
From my point of view, competitiveness is about keeping our
good jobs and creating even more and better jobs. Yet the Administration proposes to cut MEP funding by 56 percent. MEP is the
only federal program designed specifically to assist small manufacturers. MEP is the only program that has a proven track record in
creating and retaining manufacturing jobs. Weve lost 2.8 million
manufacturing jobs since 2001. This year alone weve lost 55,000
manufacturing jobs. I dont see how cutting MEP by 56 percent,
and NIST overall by 23 percent, increases American competitiveness. The bipartisan National Association of Governors has wholeheartedly endorsed the MEP Program. So yes, there are winners,
but unfortunately there are also many losers.
Now hopefully, as our nation becomes more familiar with the Augustine Report, we will all recognize that when we talk about
science funding, its more than just welfare for people in lab coats
looking through microscopes. Its not an academic exercise, knowledge for the sake of knowledge. Its about jobs, competing in the
global, in our kids, in our grandkids standard of living.
As the Augustine Commission pointed out, the thrust of our
findings is straightforward. The standard of living of Americans in
the years ahead will depend to a large extent on the quality of jobs
that they are able to hold. Without quality jobs, our citizens will
not have the purchasing power to support the standard of living
which they seek and to which many have become accustomed. Tax
revenues will not be generated to provide for strong national security and health care, and the lack of a vibrant domestic consumer
market will provide a disincentive for either U.S. or foreign companies to invest in jobs in America. That means we must invest in
S&T, but Im afraid this budget simply does not make an adequate
investment.
However, bipartisan legislation in the Senate includes many of
the recommendations of the Augustine Commission. Ive also introduced legislation that will incorporate the education and energy
recommendations of the Augustine report. So Im hopeful that we
can mount a bipartisan, bicameral effort, together with Executive
Branch cooperation, to improve this budget into something that

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truly helps our nation remain strong economically now and long
into the future. Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
[The prepared statement of Mr. Gordon follows:]
PREPARED STATEMENT

OF

REPRESENTATIVE BART GORDON

Thank you Mr. Chairman. I join you in welcoming our distinguished panel to this
mornings hearing. Its good to see you all again. However, I do think its unfortunate that we have you all here for only one day of hearings.
Im afraid that this committee is once again acquiescing its oversight responsibilities by not holding individual hearings for each of the five important agencies in
front of us today.
The good news in this budget request is the proposed increase in federal R&D.
The bad news is that that increase is less than the projected rate of inflation. So,
once again, we are investing less than the rate of inflation at a time when many
of our international competitors are increasing their investment in science and technology at faster rates than ever before.
Even more alarming is the fact that the Administrations science and technology
investment is actually decreasing. The federal S&T budget is the best method to
evaluate research funding. S&T represents the amount of funding directed towards
the creation of new knowledge and technologies as opposed to development activities.
Dr. Marburger himself has stated that federal R&D is an imperfect measure for
evaluating science and technology funding and most agree that S&T is the correct
metric.
A lot of numbers will get thrown around this morning to put a pretty face on the
budget but the fact of the matter is that the Administrations own Table 52 clearly
shows a one percent decrease for Federal S&T investment for FY07 (see attachment).
Knowing that fact and being aware of Dr. Marburgers statements in recent budget briefings, in the spirit of the Olympics, Id like nominate to Dr. Marburger for
a gold medal in the category of statistical gymnastics for making a one percent decrease look like a one percent increase despite the fact that its almost $600 million
less than FY06 funding and $1 billion less than what the Administration requested
last year according to their own budget documents.
So, in the same breath, the Administration decries earmarks in last years budget
but then counts earmarks when showing how much the S&T budget has increases
during their administration from 20012007.
As for NSF FY07 funding, Im glad that the Administration has proposed an eight
percent increase. In 2002, the Congress passed, and this President signed into law,
an authorization bill doubling NSF funding over five years. However, the Presidents
requests for NSF since that signing ceremony are still $3.8 billion short of their
commitment.
When we dig deeper we find, at least in my opinion, misguided priorities. I was
very disappointed to see a continued de-emphasis of K12 science education at NSF.
Even as the NSF budget grows, the Administration proposes a seven percent cut
to K12 programs.
NSF has been a leader in improving science and math education for over 50 years.
I do not understand how ignoring NSFs expertise in the education component of
the Presidents initiative helps competitiveness.
From my point of view competitiveness is about keeping our good jobs and creating even more and better jobs. Yet, the Administration proposed to cut MEP funding by 56 percent. MEP is the only federal program designed specifically to assist
small manufacturers. MEP is the only program with a proven track record in creating and retaining manufacturing jobs right now. We have lost 2.8 million manufacturing jobs since 2001. This last year alone, we lost another 55,000 manufacturing jobs.
I dont see how cutting MEP 56 percent, and NIST overall by 23 percent, increases American competitiveness. The bipartisan National Association of Governors
has wholeheartedly endorsed MEP.
So Yes, there are winners but unfortunately there are too many losers.
Thats the reason we have hearings and hopefully as we go through the legislative
process we be able to realign some of these priorities in ways that increase our nations competitive edge.
As people become more familiar with the Augustine Report, they will recognize
that when we talk about science funding, its more than just welfare for people in
lab coats looking though microscopes. Its not an academic exerciseknowledge for

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the sake of knowledgeits about jobs, competing in the global market and our kids
and our grandkids standard of living.
As the Augustine Commission pointed out, The thrust of our findings is straightforward. The standard of living of Americans in the years ahead will depend to a
very large degree on the quality of the jobs that they are able to hold. Without quality jobs our citizens will not have the purchasing power to support the standard of
living which they seek, and to which many have become accustomed; tax revenues
will not be generated to provide for strong national security and health care; and
the lack of a vibrant domestic consumer market will provide a disincentive for either
U.S. or foreign companies to invest in jobs in America.
That means we must invest in S&T. But Im afraid this budget simply does not
make an adequate investment.
However, bipartisan legislation in the Senate includes many of the recommendations of the Augustine commission. I also have introduced legislation that will incorporate the education and energy recommendations of the report.
I hope we can mount a bipartisan, bi-cameral effort together with executive
branch cooperation to improve this budget into something that truly helps our nation remain strong economically now and long into the future.
Thank you and I yield back to the Chairman.

Chairman BOEHLERT. Thank you very much, particularly for


your close. Eloquent words and I think youll find that were all in
agreement with those words. And let me observe this. I, too, wish
we had just more than one hearing with this very distinguished

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panel, but guess what? The reality is, these people, everyone wants
their time. Were getting them first and were having a good opportunity for a thorough dialogue, a meaningful dialogue, and then, as
in all previous years, well have our subcommittees go into play
and deal with each of the agencies in a meaningful way.
Secondly, and I know this because weve participated in many
joint sessions where we have one or more of these distinguished
guests sitting down over a cup of coffee in the office and after we
get talking about baseballtomorrows the first day of spring trainingthen we get down to serious business. But these are very busy
people and were fortunate to have them. These are the lead-off hitters. Were anxious to hear from them and I think today will be a
very important start of something really significant, not just for
this Administration or this committee, but for our beloved country.
[The prepared statement of Mr. Calvert follows:]
PREPARED STATEMENT

OF

CHAIRMAN KEN CALVERT

I welcome our honored witnesses today and look forward to their testimony. In
the State of the Union Address, the President committed $5.9 billion in the upcoming fiscal year, and more than $136 billion over ten years to increase our nations
investment in R&D, to strengthen education and to encourage entrepreneurship and
innovation. The centerpiece of the American Competitiveness Initiative will help to
ensure our global leadership by doubling over 10 years, our investment in key federal agencies that support basic research in the physical sciences and engineering.
Your agencies are the recipients of this critical investment and now have a mandate
to keep our country competitive globally.
We all expect this to be a tough budget year, but I believe there is strong bipartisan support for this initiative and I plan to work with the President and my colleagues to ensure strong funding for our science programs and science agencies, including NASA, in order to retain our global competitiveness and to grow our economy through the next generation.

[The prepared statement of Mr. Ehlers follows:]


PREPARED STATEMENT

OF

REPRESENTATIVE VERNON J. EHLERS

The Presidents FY 2007 budget request reflects several pressing national priorities, including the continuing war on terrorism, facilitating economic stimulus, and
maintaining fiscal responsibility. The Congress will have many difficult choices to
make in order to balance these priorities, control the deficit and implement our considerable domestic spending commitments.
In making these choices, we must not overlook the fact that scientific research
and development underpins all of these priorities. Scientific research and development forms the foundation of increased innovation, economic vitality and national
security. Scientific research is an investment that promises, and has historically delivered, significant returns on that investment.
I strongly support the Presidents call to maintain the competitive ability of the
United States in an increasingly innovative world economy. His American Competitiveness Initiative (ACI) requests focused funding on areas that will improve STEM
education and promote domestic innovation and economic productivity.
Our investment in physical science research has been slipping, and our overall national investment in research and development is at a rate much slower when compared to other growing economies. Furthermore, Congress has actually reduced the
appropriated funds for the physical sciences in recent years, compared to the request.
I want to particularly emphasize three science research and development programs that have garnered the attention of the President and deserve Congress utmost attention: the National Institute of Standards and Technology, the National
Science Foundation, and the Department of Energys Office of Science.
I am pleased that the budget request includes $467 for the core NIST laboratory
programs arid facilities in FY07, a 17 percent increase over FY06 enacted. This increase includes $72 million for new research initiatives and enhancements to NISTs
user facilities. I believe it is very important to support this request, as it represents
a significant yet sensible investment in programs that give the U.S. a significant

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head start in several fields of emerging technology in quantum physics and
nanotechnology that will ultimately have great economic impacts.
While I am pleased that the President has included NIST labs in his ACI, I am
very concerned about other manufacturing programs at NIST. The Presidents FY
2007 budget request cuts the Manufacturing Extension Partnership (MEP) program
by over 50 percent to $46 million. I have worked very hard over the years to help
my colleagues in Congress understand that MEP is vital to retaining American competitiveness and American jobs, and I believe they appreciate the value of this program. Furthermore, I continue to support the Advanced Technology Program (ATP)
and am disappointed that the Administration has again included no funds for the
program in the budget request. ATP is NISTs only extramural research grant program, funding high-risk, high-return technology research and development on a
cost-shared basis with U.S. industry, and as such can make a major contribution
to the American Competitiveness Initiative.
The NSFs FY 2007 budget request of $6.0 billion is an eight percent increase over
FY 2006 appropriations, the first year in a ten-year commitment to double its budget. This marks a shift from previous budget requests, as the NSF budget has been
stagnant in recent years, and even cut in FY 2005. The request is still well below
the authorized funding level necessary to complete the commitment Congress made
to double NSF funding in 2002, but I am confident that this request is the start
of a new doubling path that we can follow.
While I am heartened by the commitment the Administrations request shows for
the fundamental research budget at NSF, I would like to register my concern that
the education programs at the Foundation have not been included in the ACI. NSF
is the primary federal supporter of science and math education; it underwrites the
development of the next generation of scientists and engineers. In the FY 2007
budget request, many of the education programs at the K12 and undergraduate
level will be cut. I am particularly concerned about the trend of the current budget
request that restructures the Education and Human Resources (EHR) budget at the
Foundation and eliminates three programs critical to our nation, including the Math
and Science Partnership program. These budget choices seriously undercut the
ACIs goals to improve math and science education and to ensure that America has
an educated workforce capable of competing in the global economy.
The Department of Energys Office of Science funds 40 percent of our nations
physical science research. To maintain our economic, technical, and military preeminence, the Federal Government must continue to support research in alternative
energy sources, nanotechnology and supercomputing. I am pleased that the Office
of Science is included in the Presidents ACI and that the FY 2007 budget request
for the Office of Science is $4.1 billionan increase of 14 percent from the FY 2006
enacted level. Last year the Office endured significant cuts that, in part, led to layoffs and the delay of many important instruments. As part of the American Competitiveness Initiative, the Office of Science is not only important to the future of
U.S. science, but also our competitiveness and energy security.
FY 2007 will be another tough budget year. Significant sacrifices and compromises in spending must be made. We must not, however, sacrifice the research
and education which future generations will need to ensure their economic prosperity and domestic security. I look forward to working with my colleagues and the
witnesses testifying today to bolster American research and education.

[The prepared statement of Mr. Costello follows:]


PREPARED STATEMENT

OF

REPRESENTATIVE JERRY F. COSTELLO

Good morning. I want to thank the witnesses for appearing before our committee
to discuss the Presidents FY07 Budget for research and development. Todays hearing serves as an opportunity for oversight of certain departmental programs.
Although I am pleased with the Administrations strong commitment to the
FutureGen Initiative and the Biofuels Initiative, I am disappointed to learn that important jobs programs were severely cut and the fossil energy research and development budget was decreased.
First, as part of the Administrations American Competitiveness Initiative, the
Presidents budget proposes significant increases to support basic research in physical sciences for the Department of Energy (DOE) Office of Science, National Science
Foundation (NSF) and parts of the National Institute of Standards and Technology
(NIST). While I am pleased there are increases in this area, the majority of science
and technology programs are faced with significant losses in the FY07 budget. For
instance, the overall federal science and technology budget has been targeted for a
decrease again this year by the Administration.

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Competitiveness is about job creation and retention. Yet, the single best government program to provide immediate help to U.S. manufacturers, the Manufacturing
Extension Program (MEP), is severely cut again this year. MEP is the only federal
program with a proven track record in creating and retaining manufacturing jobs;
yet, the Administration proposes to cut MEP by 56 percent. Annually, the Illinois
Manufacturing Extension Center (IMEC) provides assistance to about 450 small and
mid-sized manufacturers. These companies reported an average cost savings of
$179,000 with IMECs assistance. Year after year, MEP Centers struggle to survive
rather than focus on what they do best: helping businesses increase efficiency and
productivity in order to be competitive in the global marketplace.
Additionally, the Advanced Technology Program (ATP) is targeted for elimination.
Both MEP and ATP have widespread Congressional and private sector support because they help in job creation now and in the future and reduce the loss of jobs
overseas. The lack of funding for these jobs programs shows complete disregard for
important domestic priorities, such as maintaining high-skill, high-wage jobs for
hard working Americans.
Second, the Department of Energys Fossil Energy Research and Development
programs make prudent investments in long-range research and development that
help protect the environment through higher efficiency power generation, advanced
technologies and improved compliance and stewardship operations. These activities
safeguard our domestic energy security. This country will continue to rely on traditional fuels for the majority of its energy requirements for the foreseeable future,
and the activities funded through this account ensure that energy technologies continue to improve with respect to emissions reductions and control and energy efficiency. The Fossil Energy Research and Development program impacts my congressional district because the coal industry is of great importance to the economy and
livelihood of my constituents in Southern Illinois. Therefore, I am disappointed to
learn that coal programs within fossil energy and research and development received $330 million in FY07, a decrease of $46 million from FY06. I have been a
strong advocate for developing technology that focuses on carbon sequestration and
am proud of the $7.6 million increase it received in the Presidents budget. However,
I would like to see a future increase of advanced research and coal-based fuel programs and will work with my Democratic and Republican colleagues to accomplish
these goals.
Third, I applaud the Administrations strong commitment to launch a public-private partnership, FutureGen, to develop a coal-based facility that will produce electricity and hydrogen with essentially zero atmospheric emissions. This budget includes $54 million in FY07 and proposes an advance appropriation of $203 million
for the program in FY08. I am committed to working with the Department of Energy, the Committee, and appropriators from both sides of the aisle to secure funding for FutureGen. I strongly believe the project is a great national investment and
Illinois stands ready to provide the resources and expertise needed to operate this
state-of-the-art coal-fired power plant.
I have led the effort to locate FutureGen in Illinois, including a bipartisan effort
in the House to secure funding for the project. The Illinois delegation has sent a
letter to Secretary Bodman, expressing our strong support for locating the
FutureGen project in Southern Illinois.
Lastly, the FY07 budget proposes $149.7 million for a Biomass and Biorefinery
Systems Research and Development program to support the new Biofuels Initiative
to develop cost competitive ethanol from cellulosic materials (agricultural wastes,
forest residues, and bioenergy crops) by 2012. With the enactment of the Energy bill
last August, the Renewable Fuels Standard (RFS) was signed into law, and it is expected to double ethanol production and use by 2012. Illinois ranks second in U.S.
corn production and corn grown and Illinois is used to produce 40 percent of the
ethanol consumed in the United States. We are in a unique position to service this
demand. I support the Biofuels Initiative because it will boost ethanol production
in my state, and will work towards achieving the ultimate goal of reducing our dependence on foreign sources of oil.
I welcome our panel of witnesses and look forward to their testimony.

[The prepared statement of Ms. Johnson follows:]


PREPARED STATEMENT

OF

REPRESENTATIVE EDDIE BERNICE JOHNSON

Thank you, Mr. Chairman and Ranking Member.


I would like to welcome all of the witnesses who are here today. The agencies you
represent shape our federal science and technology enterprise.

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For the fourteen years that I have been a Member of Congress, I have advocated
for federal leadership in S&T and sustained, strong federal investment in agencies
such as the Department of Energy, Department of Commerce, National Science
Foundation and the Department of Homeland Security.
It is unfortunate that the current federal leadership has overlooked the potential
of the physical sciences when it comes to national prosperity. While the biological
sciences have received funding increases in recent years, the physical sciences have
not been supported. As a result, our national competitiveness has suffered.
The Presidents recent State of the Union address contained promising language
suggesting that a more favorable science budget authority is on the horizon. I am
interested in the details.
The details will reveal the true commitmentor lack thereofwhen it comes to
support of the physical sciences.
Again, I thank all of the witnesses for coming today to discuss details with us.
I know you walk a fine line of science advocacy that can be particularly challenging
during years of budget constraint. I appreciate your leadership and encourage you
to continue to take a stand for science.
Thank you, Mr. Chairman. I yield back.

[The prepared statement of Mr. Honda follows:]


PREPARED STATEMENT

OF

REPRESENTATIVE MICHAEL M. HONDA

I thank Chairman Boehlert and Ranking Member Gordon for holding this important hearing today, and I thank our distinguished panel of witnesses for making the
time to be here.
In his State of the Union address, President Bush said some things that sounded
pretty goodhe proposed an American Competitiveness Initiative and said we need
to break our addiction to oil. Unfortunately, this budget request does not live up
to the lofty expectations set in that address. Instead, it cuts funding for other
science and technology programs to fund the Initiative, doesnt invest sufficiently in
the kind of energy programs we will need to break our addiction to oil, falls short
of what is needed to create an educated and skilled workforce for the future, proposes to kill the very federal programs which are able to create jobs, and even places
its funding initiatives in peril by coupling them with cuts to popular programs that
Congress is likely to restore.
Despite a purported focus to end our oil addiction, the budget for some programs
with the Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy office would decrease by 18 percent. Increases in programs such as solar and biomass come at the expense of wind,
down two percent; energy efficiency, down 13 percent; weatherization, down 27 percent, and hydropower and geothermal, which are eliminated. The NSF Math and
Science Partnerships Program is cut by 27 percent, and the undergraduate education program is reduced seven percent. These reductions, coupled with the Presidents proposal to eliminate 42 education programs and cut the Department of Education budget by the largest dollar amount ever, are incompatible with the Presidents rhetoric about the importance of educating our future workforce.
Two of the most effective government programs at helping to create and maintain
high tech jobs in the U.S. are the Manufacturing Extension Partnership (MEP) Program and the Advanced Technology Program (ATP). In a departure from the MEP
authorization bill passed by this committee last year, the budget would cut the
funding for the program by 56 percent. And once again, like a broken record, the
budget proposes eliminating ATP. This year the rationale is that the program isnt
needed due to the growth of venture capital and other financing sources. While
VCs raised a great deal of money last year, their investments did not go up appreciably, and in 2005, VCs cut their seed funding by 54 percent from the 2004 level,
from $118.3 million down to $54.3 million. This is the stage of technology development that ATP funds, and it is clearly needed to fill a growing gap in private sector
funding.
Finally, I am worried that in the shell game that this budget is, DOE science will
ultimately be short changed. The budget is able to increase funding for this by making unrealistically low requests in other areas, such as the Army Corps of Engineers
budget. Congress is sure to restore the Corps funding, and since those programs are
in the same appropriations bill as the DOE research funding, I see serious obstacles
to getting the total research funding appropriated.

[The prepared statement of Mr. Carnahan follows:]

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PREPARED STATEMENT

OF

REPRESENTATIVE RUSS CARNAHAN

Chairman Boehlert and Ranking Member Gordon, thank you for hosting this
hearing. Dr. Marburger, Dr. Bodman, Dr. Sampson, Dr. Bement, and Dr. McQueary,
thank you for taking the time to share your perspectives on the science-related components of the Presidents annual budget.
Many of us were delighted to hear President Bush declare a national focus on
science and math education and a renewed interest in cultivating an innovative
workforce in the United States. As a co-sponsor of Congressman Gordons three bills
to implement the Augustine Report recommendations, I am strongly supportive of
efforts to get our nations STEM education and workforce back on pace.
However, I am saddened to realize that many of the same budget cuts proposed
last year in the area of science have been again included in the Presidents budget
request. In particular, the funding for the Manufacturing Extension Partnership
program, an invaluable program that helps small manufacturers improve productivity through new technologies has been slashed by 56 percent.
While the Department of Energys Efficiency and Renewable Energy Resources
line item has remained relatively level in this budget, I am aware that major energy
efficiency programs, including LIHEAP, weatherization and electricity have seen
significant cuts in an effort to boost up other programs. I look forward to discussing
these choices as well during this hearing.
Finally, I am greatly concerned with funding for the National Earthquake Hazard
Reduction Program (NEHRP) because my congressional district resides along the
New Madrid fault line. While it appears that portions of the NEHRP budget have
been increased, NIST, the lead agency for NEHRP is funded at about $10 million
below the authorized level.
Thank you for your time today. I look forward to hearing your testimony.

[The prepared statement of Ms. Jackson Lee follows:]


PREPARED STATEMENT

OF

REPRESENTATIVE SHEILA JACKSON LEE

Chairman Boehlert, Ranking Member Gordon, thank you for organizing this important hearing to discuss the federal research and development budget for the 2007
fiscal year. Clearly, you have compiled an impressive panel of witnesses from some
of the top agencies affected by this budget. The five panelists here represent some
of the brightest and hardest working minds in America and I look forward to working with all of them in the future to improve our nations scientific and technological
capabilities.
I wholeheartedly support the work of the science community, and the goal of
President Bushs American Competitiveness Initiative. In spite of claims that this
2007 budget includes $5.9 billion for this initiative, however, the picture for science
and technology looks bleak. $4.6 billion of the $5.9 billion simply extends the existing research and development tax credit. I applaud the increases in basic research
at the DOE, NSF and NIST, but I am upset that President Bushs Administration
decided it was necessary, in order to pay for these increases, to make severe cuts
to other research areas, including applied research.
Overall, when you exclude research for weapon systems (called the Federal
Science and Technology Budget), the budget for research is actually cut by one percent.
As Chair of the Congressional Childrens caucus, I am especially aware of the effect the governments budget can have on children. Cuts across the board in the
Presidents budget are especially hurtful to our children, including to Head Start,
No Child Left Behind, and childrens health care, will undermine the Presidents
goals of ensuring our country remains a competitive nation in the global economy
into the future. A good amount of money has been redistributed to help science and
math education, but those truly concerned with the preservation of our technological
dominance on the world stage agree that we must go much further to help the advancement of our children, especially young women and minorities.
Further, this Administrations budget continues to pass record deficits on to our
children and continues the same bad choices that have led to huge deficits and
mounting debt during the last four years. For the fourth year in a row, the Administrations budget contributes to record deficits, and offers no real plan to put the
budget in balance. This deficit hasnt materialized because our Administration has
invested so much into the science and technology budget; instead, money is funneled
to fund tax cuts for the rich. Sadly, with the exception of a few well deserving agencies, the overall budget does not fund programs that advance our future interests.
I strongly agree with Ranking Member Gordons comment that although recognition

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was given in the State of the Union address to the importance of the research and
development budget, the rhetoric does not match the reality.
The National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) FY07 request is also
well below its authorized level. I am appalled by the Administrations effort to slash
funding to the Manufacturing Extension Program (MEP) and eliminate the Advanced Technology Program (ATP) in the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) budget. The MEP is a successful federal/State partnership designed
to help small manufacturers retain their competitive edge. The Administrations request of $46.8 million is less than one-half of what is required to maintain a fully
operational national network of MEP Centers. MEP helps smaller manufacturers
take advantage of the latest technology. Similarly, the ATP provides grants to companies for pre-competitive research; this program is now being completely eliminated from the Bush Administration budget. This is no way to help the crisis we
face in the great loss of manufacturing jobs in this nation. In spite of these tremendous job losses, this Administration chooses to basically eliminate two successful
government job creation programs. I find this kind of fiscal mismanagement to be
baffling, and hope our committee can address some of these problems forward.
Four years ago, the President signed P.L. 107368, doubling the National Science
Foundation (NSF) funding over five years. Unfortunately, the requests for NSF
since the signing ceremony have been lackluster at best. As a result of these deficient funds, NSF is still $3.8 billion (39 percent) below its FY 2007 authorized target.
Shortly after this years horrific hurricane season ended, we sat in this room during a hearing and heard how the only agency that performed well during the response to Hurricane Katrina was the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA). The President has rewarded their hard work by again cutting their
budget, down to $3.68 billion from $3.85 billion in FY06 and from $3.91 billion in
FY05.
Research and development cuts in this budget also target programs within the
Federal Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy Office at the Department of Energy (an 18 percent cut) and the Environmental Protection Agency (a seven percent
cut).
Despite the great deals of flaws in the Presidents budget and the woeful lack of
funding for R&D, I remain hopeful. I remain hopeful because we still have many
tremendous R&D programs that can impact the lives of the American people in so
many different ways. I look forward to seeing our scientific community continue to
make advances and improve upon our technological infrastructure. I also look forward to working with fellow Members of the Science Committee in defending these
programs for which we all care so much. I am excited to hear from our distinguished
panel about how their agencies will accomplish the lofty standards they have set
for themselves, the achievement of which we are all so proud. Thank you very much.

Chairman BOEHLERT. And with that, let me introduce our distinguished panel; Dr. John H. Marburger III, Director of the Office
Science and Technology Policy, affectionately referred to as Science
Advisor to the President; Dr. Samuel W. Bodman, Secretary of Energy; Dr. David A. Sampson, Deputy Secretary of Commerce; Dr.
Arden L. Bement, Jr., Director, National Science Foundation; and
for his farewell presentation, Dr. Charles E. McQueary, Under Secretary for Science and Technology, Department of Homeland Security.
And, Dr. McQueary, let me say to you, I know you announced
last week that youve submitted your resignation. We are going to
miss you and we thank you for your significant contribution to
shaping responsible public policy and having that responsible public policy implemented. It has been a delight to work with you and
we wish you well.
With that, gentlemen, lets go forward. Well put the clock on but
ignore the lights. I mean, but just when the red light goes on after
the five minutes, just say well, maybe I better think about wrapping it up. And Im always offended. You know, we have some of
the greatest talent in the world. Nobel laureates before the Committee. We have some of the most dedicated and effective public

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servants in the world, cabinet officers and people who are developing public policy for the Nation, and we ask them on Capitol Hill
to summarize, in 300 seconds or less, what they want to tell us.
So I couldnt agree more with Bart Gordon. I mean, wed liked to
have more of your time, but weve got to deal with the reality. With
that, Dr. Marburger, youre first up.
STATEMENT OF DR. JOHN H. MARBURGER III, DIRECTOR,
OFFICE OF SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY POLICY

Dr. MARBURGER. Thank you very much, Mr. Chairman and


Ranking Member Gordon and Members of the Committee. Thanks
for inviting me to testify again this year on the Presidents research and development budget, and I have submitted a written
statement, a very detailed statement for the record, so I can be
brief. And now, thanks to your remarks, Mr. Chairman, everyone
here does know that President Bushs State of the Union message
last month spoke to the importance of basic research for Americas
future economic strength, and launched a new American Competitiveness Initiative in that speech.
The initiative includes multi-year increases in funding for three
agencies, whose programs support high-impact basic research in
the physical sciences: the National Science Foundation, the Department of Energy Office of Science, and the National Institute of
Standards and Technology. And the figure thats showing on your
screen shows how their budgets would increase over a decade.
These prioritized agencies enjoy a collective increase of 9.3 percent
in this fiscal year 2007 request, and a commitment to double their
total over the next decade, which would require an average increase of seven percent per year.
This initiative also includes enhanced incentives for corporate investments in research, improvements in immigration policy for
highly qualified technical workers and students, programs to improve the quality of math and science education, experience, and
pre-college education, and expansion of worker training programs
for 21st century careers. Theres a copy of a brochure describing
this initiative. Its been distributed to the Members of the Committee and others. Its widely available. And I direct your attention
to that brochure for further information, although we will certainly
answer questions about it.
The President also announced the Advanced Energy Initiative in
his State of the Union message, and my colleague, Secretary
Bodman, will have more details about that in his testimony.
I want to emphasize that while this initiative identifies priorities, it does not abandon or diminish the importance of other areas
of science and technology, such as biomedical research or space
science. The case for increased funding for the ACI priority agencies is documented in many reports and studies that link strong
physical sciences research to progress in all fields. And I want to
thank the organizations like the Presidents own Council of Advisors on Science and Technology, the Council on Competitiveness,
and the National Academy of Sciences for their excellent reports
and advocacy on themes that the Presidents initiative addresses.
Your own actions, Mr. Chairman, as well as those of other Committee Members and Members from both parties of the House and

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the Senate, have added significantly to the favorable reception of
this initiative and will continue to be important as it works its way
through Congress. My colleagues on todays panel will speak to the
impact of this initiative on their agencies, but the Presidents proposal maintains significant strength across the breadth of science
and adds new funding where it is most needed to sustain Americas
highly successful innovation economy.
Now a superficial examination of the R&D section of the Presidents fiscal year 2007 budget will show that funding proposed for
some key science areas is lower than appropriated amounts for the
current year, fiscal year 2006. In nearly all cases, this difference
is due to the removal of so-called earmarks that agencies did not
request for fiscal year 2006 and that do not contribute to the highest priority needs of their programs. The budget proposal before
you responds to agency priorities as determined by careful planning and consultation with scientists, engineers and educators who
are experts in their fields. This Administration believes strongly
that the best way to spend public funds for science is through a
process that judges the merits of proposals from scientists by independent panels of experts. I ask this committees assistance in ensuring the best use of these scarce dollars for research upon which
our future quality of life depends.
Well, overall, this years R&D budget exceeds last years by 2.6
percent, establishing a new all-time high of $137 billion, an increase of 50 percent since 2001, and the figure thats now on the
screen shows the trend in non-defense R&D in constant dollar outlays. It is true that there is a more meaningful measure of our investment in science and technology, the Federal Science and Technology budget category. As the Ranking Member noted, that category is down by one percent, relative to 2006 appropriations, but
its up by 3.7 percent when earmarks are set aside. The request
number, by the way, showswhich is a slightly different number.
We need more gold medals for statistics. Theres many of us that
have to be experts in order to interpret this budget. But the reason
for the specific number that Congressman Gordon referred to is
due to a change in the category of applied research within NASA
for the Crew Exploration Vehicle to development. As that program
matures, the nature of the work changes and there was more than
$2 billion transfer in categories that affect the bottom line FS&T
number.
I regret to say that earmarks in the category, Federal Science
and Technology, are now estimated to be $2.7 billion, which is five
percent of the entire Federal Science and Technology budget. Actually, since the NIH and NSF budgets are thankfully spared from
this practice, that $2.7 billion is approximately 10 percent of those
budgets that are earmarked. Multi-agency initiatives such as the
National Nanotechnology Initiative and Networking and Information Technology R&D also received increases in the Presidents
budget, excluding earmarks. Our office produces a detailed budgetary supplement document for each of these programs, which we
will deliver to Congress as soon as possible. One of them is available today on the Networking and Information Technology R&D
Program. Im glad that we were able to get that out so timely. The
next one will be ready soon.

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Moving on to other agencies. The $28.4 billion top-line budget for
the 27 NIH institutes and centers is being held constant in this
proposal, at a level that exceeds the original NIH doubling figure
by $1.2 billion. The President strongly supports the priorities and
distribution of funds within NIH, advocated by Director Zerhouni
and his forward-looking roadmap process. NASAs top line, the
2006 to 2010 five-year budget, is also maintained at the $86.4 billion in last years request, while NASA science increases 1.5 percent with, or 2.1 percent without, earmarks. I want to say that
these two agencies have outstanding directors, who enjoy the confidence of this Administration. I would point out that research
budgets for NASA and NIH have been more commensurate with
the opportunities in their fields, than have budgets of other agencies with significant basic physical science research missions.
One other important physical science and engineering agency is
the Department of Defense, whose basic and applied research budget is severely earmarked with more than $1 billion of designated
funding not requested by the DOD agencies. The Presidents fiscal
year 2007 budget proposes and increase of eight percent for DOD
6.1 and 6.2 research, relative to its own earmarked base.
Mr. Chairman, the Presidents research and development budget
for fiscal year 2007 demonstrates a significant commitment to
science essential for the future leadership of our country. I look forward to working with you and your Committee to begin delivery on
that commitment during the coming months, and I thank you for
this opportunity.
[The prepared statement of Dr. Marburger follows:]
PREPARED STATEMENT

OF

JOHN H. MARBURGER III

Chairman Boehlert, Ranking Minority Member Gordon, and Members of the Committee, I am pleased to appear before you once again to discuss the Presidents research and development (R&D) budget. This is my fifth year coming before you soon
after the budget release to discuss the Presidents commitment to research and development. Once again, let me say that I greatly appreciate the effective working
relationship between our office and your committee, which I believe has resulted in
good outcomes for the Nations science and technology enterprise.
One of these outcomes has been recognition by this Administration of the critical
nature of research as the foundation to our nations economic competitiveness. This
is a message that the President has elevated through his American Competitiveness
Initiative (ACI), which received prominent attention during his State of the Union
Address, and in many of his speeches and remarks since then.
I will discuss the ACI in a moment, but first I want to provide some overall context for this years budget.
President Bush has made it very clear that his top budget priority is to cut the
deficit in half by 2009 by continuing the Presidents strong pro-growth economic
policies and limiting the growth in federal spending. The Presidents FY 2007 Budget does what is required to achieve this goal by reducing non-Department of Defense, non-Homeland Security discretionary spending by one-half of one percent. Of
course, a budget is all about priorities. And while winning the war on terror and
securing the homeland are the top two, investing in Americas future competitiveness through research and development is also of critical importance to this Administration. The proof of this is a two percent increase in non-defense R&D within a
declining overall non-defense budget. Under the FY 2007 Budget, R&D is 14.3 percent of non-defense discretionary budget authority, compared to 13.7 percent in 2001
when the President took office. At a record $59 billion, non-defense R&D is up $1.1
billion in this years request.
MAXIMIZING THE EFFECTIVENESS OF RESEARCH FUNDING
Before I get into specifics about this years budget, I want to draw your attention
to the very serious impact of earmarking on the science budget. I do this with some

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trepidation here, but I believe the problem has escalated in recent years and threatens to harm the effectiveness of our nations science if it is not addressed.
R&D earmarks have been increasing at a rate much faster than the growth in
the overall R&D budget. The American Association for the Advancement of Science
(AAAS), which uses a narrow definition of earmark, recently estimated that R&D
earmarks total $2.4 billion in 2006, an increase of 13 percent over the Associations
2005 estimate. The total has increased by about 63 percent since 2003. Other organizations have estimated even higher levels of R&D earmarking. This serious problem is noted in the Presidents Budget: Notwithstanding the recent progress in restraining discretionary spending, there is a widespread public perception that the
number of earmarked spending items is excessive, and that too many of them are
difficult to justify on the merits. The large number of earmarks, the lack of transparency, and the lack of a rigorous justification process make it difficult to assure
taxpayers that their dollars are being spent wisely.
This administration supports awarding research funds based on merit review
through a competitive process refereed by scientists, engineers, or other relevant experts. Such a system has the best prospects for ensuring that the most important
research is supported. Research earmarks signal to potential investigators that
there is an acceptable alternative to creating quality research proposals for meritbased consideration. Fortunately, Congress has not traditionally earmarked the
budgets of the National Science Foundation or the National Institutes of Health.
But major portions of other important science budgets are directed outside the agency advisory, planning, and evaluation processes. The problem is particularly serious
within the Department of Defense, where the basic and applied research budgets
have been subject to earmarks in excess of a billion dollars this year. The consequences of excessive earmarking go beyond underfunding the best possible
scienceit also impacts agency jobs and stability. For example, just last week the
Department of Energys Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL) was forced to reduce
its staff by 32 people to meet budget shortfalls caused by earmarked funding.
The existence of earmarks also affects the interpretation of the numbers that appear in the FY 2007 Budget. To maximize the impact of competitive, merit-based
programs, the Administration often does not request funds for projects that had
been earmarked the previous year. The existence of earmarks in the FY 2006 estimates and their absence in the FY 2007 request means that it can appear that the
2007 Budget requests less funding for programs, even in instances where relevant
program content actually is increasing. The fact that a significant fraction of an
agencys appropriated funds may be unavailable for the agencys mission needs deserves much wider attention. In the NIST budget, for example, the FY 2006 appropriated budget includes $137 million in earmarks, many of which do not contribute
to NISTs mission. This is a huge amount compared to NISTs total budget of about
$400M. The President is requesting a 24 percent increase for the NIST core budget,
which amounts to $104M, but since this is less than the earmarks the total appearing in the budget documents for NIST appears to be a reduction of 5.8 percent from
the current year.
President Bush has called upon Congress to ensure that funds provided under the
American Competitiveness Initiative are free of earmarks. As we discuss the importance of pursuing the best science to contribute to U.S. competitiveness, I hope the
Congress will join with us to encourage competition for research funding by rejecting research earmarks in the FY 2007 appropriations process.
THE PRESIDENTS FY 2007 R&D BUDGET
Given the overall environment of fiscal discipline, it is notable that President
Bush once again proposes a record R&D budgetover $137 billion, $3.4 billion more
than this years funding level. This represents an increase of more than 50 percent
during this Administration. Funding proposed for basic research is $28.2 billion in
2007, up from $21.3 billion in 2001a 32 percent increase. While this year much
focus is justifiably being placed on the Presidents words in his State of the Union
address and the American Competitiveness Initiative, it is important to emphasize
that the Presidents budgets have consistently supported research and development
at levels commensurate with other major priorities throughout this Administration.
Real five-year growth in the conduct of the R&D budget has exceeded 40 percent
for each of the last two years, the first time five-year inflation adjusted R&D outlays
have topped 40 percent since 1967 and the Apollo era.
AMERICAN COMPETITIVENESS INITIATIVE (ACI):
American economic strength and national security depend on our nations rich tradition of innovation. To strengthen our technological leadership in the world and
build on the Administrations record of results, President Bush announced the

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American Competitiveness Initiative (ACI) in his State of the Union address. The
ACI commits $5.9 billion in FY 2007, and more than $136 billion over 10 years, to
increase investments in R&D, strengthen education, and encourage entrepreneurship and innovation.
The centerpiece of the American Competitiveness Initiative is the Presidents proposal to double, over ten years, priority basic programs emphasizing the physical
sciences and engineering. Physical sciences research develops and advances knowledge and technologies that are used by scientists in nearly every other field. President Bush seeks to strengthen federal investments in this area by providing three
key, innovation-enabling research agencies with landmark initial investments in
2007: the National Science Foundation (NSF)$6 billion; the Department of Energys Office of Science (DOE SC)$4.1 billion; and the Department of Commerces
National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) core programs$535 million. In addition to the collective doubling effort at these agencies, the Presidents
Budget also prioritizes the similarly high-leverage basic and applied research at the
Department of Defense in 2007 by requesting $5.9 billion, $442 million (eight percent) more than last years request.
In 2007, the ACI proposes overall funding increases for NSF, DOE SC and NIST
core of $910 million, or 9.3 percent. To achieve ten-year doubling, overall annual increases for these agencies will average roughly seven percent. This amounts to a
total of $50 billion in new investments in high-leverage, innovation-enabling research that will underpin and complement shorter-term R&D performed by the private sector. To encourage private investment in innovation to be equally bold, President Bush continues to propose making the R&D tax credit permanent and supports
modernizing it to make it even more effective.
While the President has prioritized and focused physical science funding in past
budgets through such coordinated programs such as the Networking Information
Technology Research and Development (NITRD) program, the National
Nanotechnology Initiative (NNI) and others, the ACI represents an elevation of the
role of the physical sciences contributing to national competitiveness and a significant ramping up of funding over a sustained budget period. This is good news for
the science community and is a recognition and endorsement of the importance of
the physical sciences and math and science education. Members of Congressincluding many on this committeehave helped to bring attention to these issues in
our national discourse. Many other groups also deserve credit for highlighting the
importance of investment in this area, including the Presidents Council of Advisors
on Science and Technology (PCAST), the Council on Competitiveness and the National Academy of Sciences. It is a rare day when so many different organizations
speak with one voice. I am optimistic that with your help and the support of the
scientific community, we can provide funding for ACI with a minimum of research
earmarks.
Networking Information Technology R&D (NITRD)
A key interagency priority related to ACI is the Networking and Information
Technology R&D (NITRD). President Bushs 2007 Budget contains $2.8 billion for
NITRD and represents an increase of nine percent over 2006 and a 57 percent increase since 2001. This brings total investment in this area over six years to more
than $13.7 billion. Tools and capabilities that result from research in networking
and information technologies propel advances in nearly every area of science and
technology, and enhance the Nations competitiveness. Agencies participating in the
NITRD program actively coordinate their research programs, making these programs far more productive than if they were independent.
High-end computing (HEC) continues to be a major focus of NITRD. DOEs Office
of Science (DOE SC), NSF and NASA are all engaged in developing and/or operating
leadership class computing systems as recommended in the 2004 Federal Plan for
High-End Computing, with the goal of deploying petascale computing systems by
the year 2010. The DOE SC 2007 investment of $103 million in leadership class
computing, coupled with NSFs investment of $50 million in their Office of Cyber
Infrastructure, will ensure that U.S. scientists and researchers have access to the
most powerful computational resources in the world. Similarly, NASA continues to
emphasize high-end computing within its NITRD portfolio through the operation of
the Project Columbia supercomputer. All three agencies have pledged to make a portion of their leadership class computing systems available to other federal users and
the larger research community. A nine percent increase in support for advanced networking research in 2007, primarily by NSF, DARPA and DOE SC, will ensure that
large-scale networking technologies will keep pace with the rapid development of
petascale computing systems, so that the results of petascale computations are immediately accessible for analysis.

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The 2007 Budget also includes significant increases in long-term fundamental research in cyber security and information assurance, as recommended by the Presidents Information Technology Advisory Committee.
National Nanotechnology Initiative
The Presidents 2007 Budget also provides over $1.2 billion for another key ACI
interagency priority, the National Nanotechnology Initiative (NNI). The FY 2007
NNI request brings the total investment since the NNI was established in 2001 to
over $6.5 billion and nearly triples the annual investment since the first year of the
Initiative. This sustained investment is advancing our understanding of the unique
phenomena and processes that occur at the nanometer scale and expedite the responsible use of this knowledge to achieve advances in medicine, manufacturing,
high-performance materials, information technology, and energy and environmental
technologies.
Critical, broad-ranging investments continue to be made by NSF, reflecting the
agencys mission in supporting fundamental research across all disciplines of science
and engineering, whereas the DOD investment emphasizes development of materials, devices, and systems that address the departments mission. DOE is in the
process of completing five Nanoscale Science Research Centers that will make advanced research facilities and instrumentation, as well as technical expertise of
DOE laboratory staff, available to researchers from across the scientific research
community.
In addition to supporting the development of nanotechnology for beneficial uses,
the NNI funds research on the human and environmental health implications of
nanotechnology and methods for managing potential risks. The funding within the
EPA will nearly double in 2007 and additional efforts in this area are funded by
NSF, HHS, NIST, DOD, and USDA.
In response to recommendations by the Presidents Council of Advisors on Science
and Technology (PCAST) in its May 2005 report assessing the NNI, the Departments of Labor and Education have become participants in the interagency group
that manages the NNI, thereby facilitating progress toward the education and workforce goals of the Initiative.
Advanced Energy Initiative (AEI):
In his State of the Union address, President Bush outlined the Advanced Energy
Initiative (AEI) in pursuit of a national goal of replacing more than 75 percent of
U.S. oil imports from the Middle East by 2025. Since 2001, nearly $10 billion has
been invested by the Federal Government to develop cleaner, cheaper and more reliable alternative energy sources. The AEI provides a 22 percent increase for certain
clean-energy R&D programs at the Department of Energy (DOE). The Initiative will
accelerate breakthroughs in two vital areas.
The Administration will work to diversify energy sources for American homes and
businesses through: the Presidents Coal Research Initiative, with $281 million in
FY 2007 for development of clean coal technologiesnearly completing the Presidents $2 billion commitment four years ahead of schedule; the FutureGen project,
a key part of the Coal Research Initiative, with $54 million in 2007 to support the
partnership between government and the private sector to build a near-zero atmospheric emissions demonstration coal plant that captures the carbon dioxide it produces and stores it in deep geologic formations; the Presidents new $148 million
Solar America Initiativean increase of $65 million over FY 2006to accelerate the
development of semiconductor materials that convert sunlight directly to electricity;
$44 million for wind energy researcha $5 million increase over the 2006 level; and
clean and safe nuclear energy under the new $250 million global nuclear energy
partnership.
The President also proposes acceleration of the development of domestic, renewable alternatives to gasoline and diesel fuels through: $150 million for the Biofuels
Initiativea $59 million increase over FY 2006to help develop bio-based transportation fuels such as cellulosic ethanol from agricultural waste products, such as
wood chips, stalks, or switch grass; $31 million to speed the development of advanced battery technology to extend the range of hybrid vehicles and make possible
plug-in hybrids and electric carsa 27 percent increase over FY 2006; and $289
million for the Presidents Hydrogen Fuel Initiative.
Climate Change Science and Technology
The Administration is also carrying out two important climate change programs
that represent a continuation of our commitment to understanding the climate system and developing technologies that will lead to cleaner, cheaper and more reliable
alternative energy sources.

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The U.S. Global Change Research Program, authorized by the Global Change Research Act of 1990, and the Presidents Climate Change Research Initiative of 2001
are integrated in the comprehensive U.S. Climate Change Science Program (CCSP).
The CCSP published the Strategic Plan for the U.S. Climate Science Program in
2003, describing a strategy for developing knowledge of climate variability and
change and for application of this knowledge. The 2007 CCSP budget sustains the
level enacted in 2006. The CCSP comprises over 13 agencies, but nearly 90 percent
of the CCSP funding is distributed among NASA, NSF, NOAA and DOE. The Climate Change Research Initiative, a focused component of CCSP, is sustained at
$200 million in 2007.
The U.S. Climate Change Technology Program (CCTP) supports research, development, deployment, and voluntary programs to reduce greenhouse gas emissions
via renewable energy, fossil energy and nuclear energy, and also to improve efficiency and carbon sequestration. Led by DOE, CCTP recently published a Vision
and Framework for Strategy which outlines six strategic goals that will guide the
CCTP strategy planning and interagency coordination. These goals are:
Reduce Emissions for Energy End-Use and Infrastructure
Reduce Emissions from Energy Supply
Capture and Sequester Carbon Dioxide
Reduce Emissions of Non-CO2 Greenhouse Gases
Improve Capabilities to Measure and Monitor GHG Emissions
Bolster Basic Science Contributions to Technology Development
CCTP will work toward these goals by employing several core approaches that
will stimulate participation by others and ensure progress in this important area.
These approaches include strengthening climate change technology research and development by helping to coordinate and prioritize ongoing activities, creating new
opportunities for partnerships and international collaboration, and providing technology policy recommendations.
AGENCY BUDGET HIGHLIGHTS
National Science Foundation (NSF):
Funds are requested to increase the budget for NSF by 7.9 percent to $6.02 billion
in FY 2007, 36 percent above 2001s $4.4 billion level. Similar investments in the
past have yielded important scientific discoveries, which boost economic growth and
enhance Americans quality of life.
The centerpiece of the American Competitiveness Initiative is President Bushs
plan to double investment over a 10-year period in key federal agencies that support
basic research programs emphasizing in physical sciences and engineering. NSF is
one of the three key agencies, as it is the primary source of support for university
and academic research in the physical sciences, funding potentially transformative
basic research in areas such as nanotechnology, advanced networking and information technology, physics, chemistry, material sciences, mathematics and engineering.
The NSF funding derived from the ACI initiative is expected to support as many
as 500 more research grants in 2007 and provide opportunities for upwards of 6,400
additional scientists, students, post-doctoral fellows and technicians to contribute to
the innovation enterprise.
NSF leads two previously mentioned Administration priority research areas that
promise to strengthen the Nations economy: the National Nanotechnology Initiative
(NNI) and the Networking and Information Technology R&D program (NITRD).
NSF-funded nanotechnology research, proposed at $373 million in FY 2007, an 8.4
percent increase over 2006 and 149 percent since 2001, has advanced our understanding of materials at the molecular level and has provided insights into how innovative mechanisms and tools can be built atom by atom. This emerging field holds
promise for a broad range of developing technologies, including higher-performance
materials, more efficient manufacturing processes, higher-capacity computer storage, and microscopic biomedical instruments and mechanisms. NSFs investments in
NITRD, funded at $904 million in 2007, up $93 million over 2006 and 42 percent
since 2001, support all major areas of basic information technology (IT) research.
NSF also incorporates IT advances into its scientific and engineering applications,
supports using computing and networking infrastructure for research, and contributes to IT-related education for scientists, engineers, and the IT workforce.
Continuing concerns about the vulnerability of computers, networks and information systems have prompted increased NSF investments in cyber security research,
education and training. The NITRD investment includes $35 million, an increase of
$10 million, for Cyber Trust, a cutting-edge research program to ensure that com-

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puters and networks underlying national infrastructures, as well as in homes and
offices, can be relied upon to work even if faced with cyber attacks. Cyber Trust is
part of a larger NSF Cyber Security and Information Assurance research effort totaling $97 million, an increase of 26 percent for FY 2007.
NSF will invest $20 million in fundamental research on new technologies for sensors and sensor systems to improve detection of explosives, including Improvised Explosive Devices (IEDs).
The Foundation, in close cooperation with other agencies, will also address policyrelevant Science Metrics with a new research effort funded at $6.8 million. The goal
is to develop the data, tools and knowledge needed to establish an evidence-based
science of science policy as a means for informing policy-makers about opportunities and to encourage innovation.
The FY 2007 Budget will continue NSFs efforts to prepare U.S. students for the
science and engineering workforce. The new Discovery Research K12 program will
invest $104 million to strengthen K12 science, technology, engineering and mathematics education by supporting the development of effective science and math assessments, improving learning in K12 education and introducing cutting edge discoveries into K12 classrooms.
Department of Energy (DOE):
DOE is the lead agency for the Presidents Advanced Energy Initiative, highlighted above. The 2007 Budget proposes:
$148 million for the Solar America Initiative (an increase of $65 million over
FY06) to accelerate development of cost-effective photovoltaic materials;
$150 million for the Biofuels Initiative (a $59 million increase over FY06), to
help enable cellulosic ethanol to be practical and competitive within six years;
$31 million for development of high-energy, high-power batteries (a $6.7 million increase over FY06) for hybrid-electric and plug-in hybrid vehicles (includes $1.4 million for the Department of Transportation);
$289 million for the Hydrogen Fuel Initiative (an increase of $53 million over
FY06) to accelerate development of hydrogen fuel cells and affordable hydrogen-powered cars;
$44 million for wind energy research (a $5 million increase over FY06) to help
improve the efficiency and lower the costs of wind technologies for use in lowspeed wind environments; and
$54 million for the FutureGen Initiative (an increase of $36 million over
FY06) to develop technologies for a coal gasification plant with near-zero atmospheric emissions.
The 2007 budget also proposes $250 million for the Global Nuclear Energy Partnership (an increase of $171 million over FY06), with the goals to demonstrate advanced fuel cycle technologies, to expand the domestic use of nuclear power, and to
provide for safe, environmentally responsible global nuclear energy systems that
support non-proliferation objectives.
The Office of Science in DOE (DOESC) is one of the three priority agencies in
the Presidents American Competitiveness Initiative, supporting scientific studies
and infrastructure for a wide range of R&D related to economically significant innovations. Within DOESC, the new funding from ACI is expected to support approximately 2,600 new researchers. Highlights of the FY07 budget proposal within DOE
SC include:
completion of the Center for Integrated Nanotechnology and the Center for
Functional Nanomaterials;
maximum capacity operations of the full suite of major x-ray light source and
neutron research facilities;
support for project engineering and design and R&D for the National Synchrotron Light Source II;
upgrade of the leadership class computing facilities at Oak Ridge and Argonne;
upgrade of the NERSC supercomputer facility at LBNL;
full operations for the high-energy physics facilities at SLAC and Fermilab;
increase in support for R&D towards a potential linear collider;
robust operations for the nuclear physics facilities at TJNAF and RHIC;
project engineering and design towards an accelerator upgrade for the facility
at TJNAF;

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full funding for ITER;


increase in operations over FY06 for the domestic fusion facilities;
optimum operations of the BER facilities;
increase in support for the GTL research.

National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST):


National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) core programs receive
$535 million, an increase of 24 percent after earmarks are excluded from the enacted FY 2006 level, but a decrease of 5.8 percent relative to 2006 appropriated
funds. In 2007, the American Competitiveness Initiative proposes overall funding increases for NIST to focus on meeting the Nations most urgent measurement science
and standards to speed innovation and improve U.S. competitiveness. The FY 2007
request is a 55 percent increase over 2001. The Administration continues to insist
on the highest priority for NIST lab research which is producing the scientific foundation for new technologies and providing essential technical support through its
standards activities for industrial development and commercialization of new and
emerging
technologies,
in
such
areas
as
advanced
manufacturing,
nanomanufacturing and nanometrology, homeland security, biosystems and health,
and quantum computing.
To improve efficiency, the Budget also streamlines administrative layers within
the Technology Administration (TA). The Budget reflects TAs intent to evaluate its
current operating practices and incorporate methods to improve the effectiveness of
its operations.
Department of Defense (DOD):
DODs FY 2007 R&D budget is over $74 billion. This level of funding will support
the Departments transforming commitment to reorient its capabilities and forces for
greater agility, while enabling effective responses to asymmetric and uncertain challenges of future conflicts.
These funds will also help address emergent threats through countermeasures to
biological agents and novel technologies to detect and neutralize improvised explosive devices, mines, rockets and mortars.
The Science and Technology (S&T) component of the overall DOD R&D budget includes basic research (6.1), applied research (6.2), and advanced technology development (6.3). At $11.1 billion in the FY 2007 Budget, DOD S&T exceeds last years
request by $442 million. From 2000 to 2006, Congressional adds to DOD S&T quadrupled. For 2006, there were over 1,300 of these adds (totaling $3.1 billion) that
must be identified and tracked down, advertised in a way specific to the Congressional mark, evaluated, negotiated and awarded, all separate from other potential
awards. This means that those awards consume several times the staff and management resources of the average research award, and may not even target a militaryspecific need. A total of $5.9 billion is provided for DOD basic and applied research.
This is $738 million less than the FY 2006 enacted level in this category, but $561
million greater than the FY 2006 budget request. The struggle continues over Congressional earmarks and true DOD priorities. The Administration wishes to work
with Congress to align Legislative and Executive priorities for funding the best scientific research possible to support our military forces.
Events of the last few years, including the Global War on Terror and federal assistance to disasters in the U.S. and around the world, have emphasized the importance of continuing our investment in next generation command, control and communication technologies and our ability to integrate with sensor platforms. Specific
high potential S&T programs relating to these challenges have been increased in
this budget by $42.3 million (30 percent over 2006 enacted levels).
The DOD also understands the importance of continued investment in power and
energy technologies. These efforts span a range of topicsfrom novel battery technologies to reduce the weight burden that soldiers must carry to power their critical
equipmentto research on advanced propulsion technologies to enable revolutionary
aerospace capabilities. These aerospace propulsion investments include an additional $33 million (13 percent above 2006 enacted) in certain applied research and
advanced technology development programs.
The S&T needs of the DOD are diverse and highly challenging, drawing upon the
best minds in the Service labs, industry and academia. The development of the future workforce to support defense S&T remains an important challenge. We continue to confront issues relating to training the next generation, attracting the best
candidates and rewarding top performers. Important programs such as the National
Defense Science and Engineering Graduate (NDSEG) Fellowship program and the
Science, Mathematics and Research for Transformation (SMART) Defense Scholar-

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ship program allow us to provide support and incentive to graduate and undergraduates to enter into DOD-relevant research careers. In fact, this budget virtually
doubles the SMART program funding to $19.5 million.
Department of Homeland Security (DHS):
The Presidents FY 2007 request includes $1 billion for the DHS Directorate of
Science and Technology (including funding for research at TSA, Coast Guard and
Secret Service) and $536 million for the Domestic Nuclear Detection Office.
R&D at DHS S&T is focused on countering the threat of terrorism through improved threat awareness and infrastructure protection, as well as the development
of countermeasures against chemical and biological agents, explosives, and other
catastrophic threats. The Presidents FY 2007 budget request will provide $86.5 million for R&D projects to address the threat from conventional explosives used in the
form of improvised or vehicle born explosive devices, which remain one of the most
accessible weapons available to terrorists to attack and cripple critical infrastructure, or to inflict severe casualties.
To continue to develop the tools necessary to prevent the terrorist use of a nuclear
weapon against the United States, the Presidents FY 2007 Budget supports aggressive R&D and operational programs for nuclear defense with a 70 percent increase
over FY 2006 funding to expand and support the capabilities of the Domestic Nuclear Detection Office (DNDO) DNDO is working to develop and deploy a comprehensive system to detect and mitigate any attempt to import, assemble or transport a nuclear explosive device, fissile material or radiological material intended for
illicit use within the United States.
The Administration is also eager to protect civilian and commercial aviation from
the threat of man-portable air defense systems (MANPADS). The government has
developed a multi-layered defense against this threat consisting of risk reduction at
major airports, counter proliferation efforts, and development of new countermeasures. In the 2007 Budget the President has requested $6 million to complete
DHSs counter-MANPADS program. The final phase of this program calls for actual
live testing of the two systems under development.
National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA):
Two years ago, the President outlined a bold vision for sustained and affordable
human and robotic exploration of space, with the Moon as a first step toward
human missions to Mars and beyond. NASA instituted various organizational and
programmatic steps to pursue this vision in the initial months after its release. Over
the last year, NASA has continued working to redirect its existing human space
flight programsthe Space Shuttle and International Space Station (ISS)toward
the goal of supporting the vision. Further, it has determined the launch and spacecraft architecture requirements necessary to implement the vision in earnest. An exciting array of space science missions is also being planned that will enhance our
understanding of the solar system, the complex interaction between the Earth and
space and its impact on our environment, and the origin, structure, evolution, and
destiny of the universe.
In support of these goals, the President has requested $16.8 billion in his 2007
budget for NASA, a 3.2 percent increase over the enacted 2006 level (excluding onetime supplementals), reflecting a strong commitment by the Administration to continued pursuit of the exploration vision. Of this amount, the budget provides $5.33
billion for earth and space science activities 1.5 percent increase in FY 2007 over
FY 2006 in order to continue advancing our knowledge of the Sun, Earth, planets
and broader universe. Further, the budget requests $3.98 billion for the new vehicles and technologies necessary to move forward on the exploration activities contained in the vision. Such activities include beginning development of the Crew Exploration Vehicle (which will eventually carry astronauts to the Moon), pursuing the
lunar robotic exploration program, and researching other critical new technologies
to support exploration. The budget also proposes $6.23 billion for operating the
Space Shuttle and continuing assembly and operations of the ISS. With regard to
this activity, NASA has selected a configuration for the ISS that is consistent with
the Presidents vision and meets the needs of our international partners, while employing the minimum number of Shuttle flights required to complete assembly of
the ISS before Shuttle retirement in 2010. I should note here that, of necessity, the
budget for NASA also makes some difficult decisions, canceling some projects with
high technical risk and/or whose cost would have led to the certain delay or cancellation of other important programs.
In addition to supporting a broad range of space activities, the President has requested $724 million for NASAs aeronautics program. NASA is restructuring its
aeronautics activities in order to dedicate itself to the mastery and intellectual stew-

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ardship of the core competencies of aeronautics in all flight regimes, as well as ensuring that research is focused on appropriate areas that are unique to NASAs capabilities. NASA will implement a completely replanned Airspace Systems Program
in FY 2007 that aligns with key research requirements of the Next Generation Air
Transportation System, and is working with the DOD to take a strategic, national
asset view of aeronautics facilities such as wind tunnels.
NASA is also working with the DOD to take a strategic, national asset view of
aeronautics facilities such as wind tunnels.
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA):
For the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) in the Department of Commerce, the FY 2007 Budget provides $338 million for Oceanic and Atmospheric Research (OAR), an 8.6 percent reduction from 2006 enacted, due mostly
to earmarks. This investment provides for ongoing research on climate, weather, air
quality, and ocean processes. For NOAA programs that support the climate change
science program, $181 million is provided, and the National Sea Grant College Program is sustained at the 2006 level of $55 million.
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA):
The FY 2007 request for science and technology funding at EPA is $788 million,
approximately eight percent above the FY 2006 level, even before accounting for earmarks. This investment supports core Agency programs and strengthens high priority program areas, including maintaining and improving our nations water collection and distribution systems, understanding the potential environmental impacts
of nanotechnology, and expanding EPAs computational toxicology program. In addition, the FY 2007 request continues to support the Integrated Risk Information System (IRIS) and the Science to Achieve Results (STAR) program. (OMB version)
Department of Transportation (DOT):
The FY 2007 Budget request for highway-related research is $562 million, which
is $38 million more than 2006. Highway research includes the Federal Highway Administrations transportation research and technology contract programs and National Highway Traffic Safety Administration research and analysis. These research
programs include the investigation of ways to improve safety, reduce congestion, improve mobility, reduce life cycle construction and maintenance costs, improve the
durability and longevity of highway pavements and structures, enhance the cost-effectiveness of highway infrastructure investments, and minimize negative impacts
on the natural and human environment.
The 2007 Budget request for Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) Research,
Engineering, and Development is $130 million, including $88 million for continued
research on aviation safety issues. The remaining research funding is for mobility
and environmental issues, including $18 million for the Joint Planning and Development Office for the advancement of the Next Generation Air Transportation System.
In addition, the 2007 Budget requests $8.2 million for the Research and Innovative Technology Administration to coordinate and advance the pursuit of transportation research that cuts across all modes of transportation, such as hydrogen fuels
and remote sensing. DOT research programs also support the National
Nanotechnology Initiative, the U.S. Climate Change Technology Program, and the
Presidents Hydrogen Fuel Initiative.
CONCLUSION
Making choices is difficult even when budgets are generous, but tight budgets
have the virtue of focusing on priorities and strengthening program management.
This years R&D budget proposal maintains levels of funding that allow America to
maintain its leadership position in science and move ahead in selected priority
areas. The American Competitiveness Initiative and Advanced Energy Initiative
properly focus R&D investments in areas that will increase our economic competitiveness decrease our dependence on foreign oil, and accelerate development of clean
energy technologies.
America currently spends one and a half times as much on federally funded research and development as Europe, and three times as much as Japan, the next
largest investor. Our scientists collectively have the best laboratories in the world,
the most extensive infrastructure supporting research, the greatest opportunities to
pursue novel lines of investigation, and the most freedom to turn their discoveries
into profitable ventures if they are inclined to do so.
We lead not only in science, but also in translating science to economically significant products that enhance the quality of life for all people.
This budget will sustain this leadership and maintain science and technology capabilities that are the envy of the world. I would be pleased to respond to questions.

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BIOGRAPHY

FOR

JOHN H. MARBURGER III

John H. Marburger III, Science Adviser to the President and Director of the Office
of Science and Technology Policy, was born on Staten Island, N.Y., grew up in Maryland near Washington D.C. and attended Princeton University (B.A., Physics 1962)
and Stanford University (Ph.D. Applied Physics 1967). Before his appointment in
the Executive Office of the President, he served as Director of Brookhaven National
Laboratory from 1998, and as the third President of the State University of New
York at Stony Brook (19801994). He came to Long Island in 1980 from the University of Southern California where he had been a Professor of Physics and Electrical
Engineering, serving as Physics Department Chairman and Dean of the College of
Letters, Arts and Sciences in the 1970s. In the fall of 1994 he returned to the faculty at Stony Brook, teaching and doing research in optical science as a University
Professor. Three years later he became President of Brookhaven Science Associates,
a partnership between the University and Battelle Memorial Institute that competed for and won the contract to operate Brookhaven National Laboratory.
While at the University of Southern California, Marburger contributed to the rapidly growing field of nonlinear optics, a subject created by the invention of the laser
in 1960. He developed theory for various laser phenomena and was a co-founder of
the University of Southern Californias Center for Laser Studies. His teaching activities included Frontiers of Electronics, a series of educational programs on CBS
television.
Marburgers presidency at Stony Brook coincided with the opening and growth of
University Hospital and the development of the biological sciences as a major
strength of the university. During the 1980s federally sponsored scientific research
at Stony Brook grew to exceed that of any other public university in the northeastern United States.
During his presidency, Marburger served on numerous boards and committees, including chairmanship of the governors commission on the Shoreham Nuclear Power
facility, and chairmanship of the 80 campus Universities Research Association
which operates Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory near Chicago. He served as
a trustee of Princeton University and many other organizations. He also chaired the
highly successful 1991/92 Long Island United Way campaign.
While on leave from Stony Brook, Marburger carried out the mandates of the Department of Energy to improve management practice at Brookhaven National Laboratory. His company, Brookhaven Science Associates, continued to produce excellent science at the lab while achieving ISO14001 certification of the labs environmental management system, and winning back the confidence and support of the
community.

Chairman BOEHLERT. Thank you very much, Dr. Marburger. Secretary Bodman.
STATEMENT OF DR. SAMUEL W. BODMAN, SECRETARY,
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY

Secretary BODMAN. Good morning, Mr. Chairman and Ranking


Member Gordon. Im very happy to be here. Im very proud to be
here representing the Department of Energy today, and I hardly
need to tell you that there is a great sense of excitement and enthusiasm within the entire Department of Energy, and in particular the Office of Science, which deals with the subject of this
mornings activities, or at least some of the subjects of this mornings activities.
Our Office of Science is responsible for 10 world-class national
laboratories and is the primary builder and operator of large scientific facilities in the United States, and this office plays a critical
role in ensuring the continued American leadership as well as contributions to our overall economic well-being. Investments in these
facilities is a lot more than just bricks and mortar. It is an investment in, if you will, in discovery, in the future of our country. As
youve heard in the State of the Union and has been talked about,
the President announced several new priorities in the energy area,
including two new Presidential initiatives. We believe that these

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initiatives will significantly change the future of science in this
country and will be a bold statement to our science colleagues
around the world. All of this is spelled out in detail in my formal
written remarks.
Let me just take this opportunity, while I have the floor, to mention a few highlights. As a part of the ACI, the 2007 budget includes a $505 million increase for the Office of Science in the Department of Energy. That is a 14 percent increase up to a level of
$4.1 billion. Frankly, we are thrilled with that and we think we
know exactly how to put that money to work. This reflects the
Presidents commitment to double the federal investment in the
most critical basic research programs in the physical sciences over
the next ten years. Developing revolutionary science-driven technology is at the heart of the Department of Energys mission. And
to ensure that America remains at the forefront in our very increasingly competitive world, our department is pursuing what we
have come to call transformational new technologies in the cutting
edge scientific fields that will be important in this next century,
areas like nanotechnology, material science, biotechnology, and
high speed computing.
The President has also announced the new Advanced Energy Initiative, to increase spending on clean energy sources that will
transform our transportation sector. It will literally transform our
entire economy and reduce our dependence on imported fossil fuel.
Specifically, the 2007 budget request proposes $149 million for biomass and biofuel programs, and a like amount, $148 million, for
solar energy. Both are increases of about $50 million, so very sizable percentage increases.
In addition, the budget requests a total $288 million to support
implementation of the Presidents Hydrogen Fuel Initiative, and
provide $60 million for U.S. participation in the International Thermonuclear Experimental Reactor, or ITER, as we have come to call
it. The goal of ITER is to tap nuclear fusion as an enormous source
of energy, a plentiful and environmentally safe energy. All of that
is true, but it is a long-term investment that will take, it is expected, a number of decades.
As part of the Presidents Advanced Energy Initiative, the departments 2007 budget also features $250 million to begin investments in the Global Nuclear Energy Partnership. This is a
groundbreaking new international effort to help meet the worlds
rapidly growing electricity needs with safe emissions-free nuclear
power, while enhancing our ability to keep nuclear technology and
material out of the hands of those who seek to use it for non-peaceful purposes.
Mr. Chairman, thats just a brief outline of the science and research activities that are part of this budget and that were engaged in. I look forward to discussing any of these matters or other
issues in the budget with you. Thank you.
[The prepared statement of Secretary Bodman follows:]
PREPARED STATEMENT

OF

SAMUEL W. BODMAN

Good morning, Chairman Boehlert, Ranking Member Gordon and Members of the
Committee. I am pleased to appear before you today along with my Administration
colleagues to discuss the Presidents FY 2007 budget request for the Department of

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Energy (DOE) and the role that DOE plays in the Presidents science and energy
initiatives.
In his State of the Union address on January 31 President Bush laid out an ambitious and exciting path for the Administration when he unveiled his American Competitiveness Initiative and the Advanced Energy Initiative. The American Competitiveness Initiative will invest in and reverse a trend of static funding for research
and development in the physical sciences; as a result we in the Energy Department
believe this initiative is a real landmark. The proposal will double the federal commitment to the most critical basic research programs in the physical sciences over
the next ten years; a total of $50 billion of new funding through DOEs Office of
Science, the National Science Foundation, and the Department of Commerces National Institute of Standards and Technology. This historic commitment will significantly change the future of science in this country and will be a bold statement to
our science colleagues around the world. An important element of the Advanced Energy Initiative is the Global Nuclear Energy Partnership, a comprehensive strategy
to enable the safe and secure expansion of nuclear energy around the world. We in
the Energy Department are excited about this vision and mission and the role we
will play in it. I am pleased to have the opportunity to testify before you today to
urge the Science Committee to join us in this initiative.
The Department of Energys budget for Fiscal Year (FY) 2007 follows the blueprint laid out by the Presidents new initiatives. The $23.5 billion budget request
seeks to address Americas short-term energy needs while positioning our country
for the future. The budget request makes bold investments to improve Americas energy security while protecting our environment, puts policies in place that foster
continued economic growth, spurs scientific innovation and discovery, and addresses
and reduces the threat of nuclear proliferation.
Most notably, this budget request contains:
A Landmark Investment in Scientific Research
The FY 2007 budget includes a $505 million increase in DOEs Science programs, which is part of a commitment to double funding for certain high-leverage science agencies over the next ten years. The American Competitiveness Initiative recognizes that scientific discovery and understanding help
drive economic strength and security. Developing revolutionary, science-driven technology is at the heart of the Department of Energys mission. The increase proposed for the Departments Science programs reflects the significant contribution DOE and its world-class research facilities make to the Nation.
Strategic Investments to Reduce Americas Dependence on Foreign
Oil and Develop Clean Energy Technologies
The Presidents Advanced Energy Initiative provides a 22 percent increase for
research that can help reduce Americas dependence on foreign oil and advance clean energy technologies. The FY 2007 Budget proposes $149.7 million
for Biomass and Biorefinery Systems Research and Development (R&D) program to support the new Biofuels Initiative to develop cost competitive ethanol from cellulosic materials (agricultural wastes, forest residues, and bioenergy crops) by 2012.
In addition, the budget request continues to pursue the vision of reducing
greenhouse gas emissions through the development of a hydrogen economy.
The FY 2007 Budget requests a total of $289.5 million (including $1.4 million
requested by the Department of Transportation) to support implementation
of the Presidents Hydrogen Fuel Initiative. The FY 2007 Budget also provides
a 27 percent increase for advanced battery technologies that can improve the
efficiency of conventional hybrid electric vehicles (HEV) and help make plugin HEVs commercially viable.
To help develop clean electricity, the FY 2007 Budget funds diverse technology R&D programs. The FY 2007 Budget includes $148.4 million for a new
Solar America Initiative to develop cost competitive solar photovoltaic technology by 2015. The FY 2007 Budget also provides $60.0 million for U.S. participation in International Thermonuclear Experimental Reactor (ITER), an
international experimental reactor program that has the potential for putting
us on a pathway to tap nuclear fusion as an enormous source of plentiful and
environmentally safe energy. The FY 2007 Budget advances the Administrations commitment to the FutureGen project, which will establish the capability and feasibility of co-producing electricity and hydrogen from coal with
near-zero atmospheric emissions of pollutants and greenhouse gasses.

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Strategic Investments to Enable Nuclear Energy Expansion in a
Cleaner, Safer Manner
The Departments FY 2007 budget features $250 million to begin investments
in the Global Nuclear Energy Partnership (GNEP). GNEP is a comprehensive
strategy to enable an expansion of nuclear power in the U.S. and around the
world, to promote non-proliferation goals, and to help resolve nuclear waste
disposal issues.
The Energy Information Administration projects that over the next 25 years,
demand for electricity in the United States alone will grow by over 40 percent. Nuclear power is an abundant, safe, reliable and emissions-free way to
help meet this growing demand for energy throughout the world. As part of
the GNEP strategy, the United States will work with key international partners to develop and demonstrate new proliferation resistant technologies to
recycle spent nuclear fuel to reduce waste. To help bring safe, clean nuclear
power to countries around the world, the international GNEP partners will
also develop a fuel services program to supply developing nations with reliable access to nuclear fuel in exchange for their commitment to forgo developing enrichment and recycling technologies.
As a complement to the GNEP strategy, the Department will continue to pursue a permanent geologic disposal site for nuclear waste at Yucca Mountain,
and the FY 2007 budget includes $544.5 million to support this goal. Based
on technological advancements that would be made through GNEP, the volume and radio-toxicity of waste requiring permanent disposal at Yucca Mountain could be greatly reduced, delaying the need for an additional repository
indefinitely. It is important to emphasize, however, that GNEP does not diminish in any way the need for, or the urgency of, the nuclear waste disposal
program at Yucca Mountain. Yucca Mountain is still required under any fuel
cycle scenario. Even with the successful development of a recycling program,
there will remain a significant amount of once-through spent nuclear fuel
that will require final disposal in a repository. In addition, the residual material from the recycling program also will require final disposition in a repository. The GNEP will affect the longer-term scope of the repository program,
but not the near term need for the Department to put in place a program
to begin accepting spent nuclear fuel for disposal as quickly as feasible.
GNEP builds upon the successes of programs initiated under President
Bushs leadership to encourage the construction of new nuclear power plants
here in the United States. The FY 2007 budget includes $632.7 million for
nuclear energy programs, a $97.0 million increase above the FY 2006 appropriation. In addition to the $250 million for GNEP, Generation IV (Gen IV)
research and development ($31.4 million) will improve the efficiency, sustainability, and proliferation resistance of advanced nuclear systems and Nuclear
Power 2010 ($54.0 million), will lead the way, in a cost-sharing manner, for
industry to order new, advanced light-water reactors by the end of this decade. In addition, ongoing implementation of the Energy Policy Act of 2005
(EPACT) will establish federal insurance to protect sponsors of the first new
nuclear power plants against the financial impact of certain delays during
construction or in gaining approval for operation that are beyond the sponsors control.
PROMOTING SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGICAL INNOVATION
As the millennium unfolds, we stand on the threshold of scientific revolutions in
biotechnology and nanotechnology, in materials science, in fusion energy and highintensity light sources, and in high-performance computing, to touch on only a few
important fields. The nations that lead these scientific revolutions will likely dominate the global high-tech economy for the foreseeable future. We are on the verge
of major new discoveries about the nature of our universe, solutions to some of the
deepest mysteries of the cosmos and the fundamental understanding of matterinsights that will transform the way we think about ourselves and our world.
The Presidents American Competitiveness Initiative will encourage American innovation and bolster our ability to compete in the global economy through increased
federal investment in critical areas of research, especially in the physical sciences
and engineering. This initiative will generate scientific and technological advances
for decades to come and will help ensure that future generations have an even
brighter future.
Twenty-first century science requires sophisticated scientific facilities. In many
fields, private industry has neither the resources nor the near-term incentive to
make significant investments on the scale required for basic scientific research to

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yield important discoveries. Indeed, in recent years, corporate basic research has declined. That is why the Departments Office of Science, which is responsible for ten
world-class U.S. national laboratories and is the primary builder and operator of scientific facilities in the United States, plays such a critical role. Investment in these
facilities is much more than bricks and mortar: it is an investment in discovery and
in the future of our nation. The Office of Science is also educating and training our
next generation of scientists and engineers. Roughly half of the researchers at Office
of Science-run facilities are university faculty or graduate or postdoctoral students
(who work side by side with scientists and researchers employed directly by the
labs), and about a third of Office of Science research funds go to institutions of higher learning. In addition, the National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA) operates three world-class national laboratories which greatly advanced the frontiers of
science in connection with their national security mission and which have many
interactions with universities.
I am pleased to inform the Committee that the Department is already achieving
meaningful scientific results with our latest high end supercomputing systems, including Blue Gene L and Purple at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory and
our Red Storm supercomputer at Sandia National Laboratory. Within a month of
coming online, weapons designers at Lawrence Livermore and Los Alamos, working
jointly, have discovered key physics that are important to weapons design that could
not have been identified using less capable computers. This discovery is critically
important to predicting the behavior of weapons, and, as a result, our ability to be
responsive to national needs. Because of the interrelationships among the Departments science-based programs, these new, remarkably powerful computers are already having a major, positive effect on science in several of our laboratories.
The Presidents FY 2007 budget request of $4.1 billion for the Office of Science
will move us forward on several scientific fronts designed to produce discoveries that
will strengthen our national competitiveness. Final international negotiations are
close to being completed with our international partners in ITER, the fusion experimental reactor designed to demonstrate the scientific and technological feasibility
of fusion as a plentiful, environmentally benign source of energy. A request of $60.0
million in FY 2007 provides funding for the second year of the ITER project. The
return on investment will expand across international borders and has the promise
of tremendous economic opportunity and development.
The FY 2007 budget also includes $105.9 million to enable us to continue construction of the Linac Coherent Light Source (LCLS), the worlds first x-ray free
electron laser. The LCLS will allow us to watch matter in action, one molecule at
a time, and witness chemical reactions at the microscopic level in real time. The
structural knowledge obtained with x-rays holds the key to understanding the properties of matter such as mechanical strength, magnetism, transport of electrical currents and light, energy storage, and catalysis. Likewise, in biology much of what we
know about structure and function on a molecular level comes from x-ray studies.
Such knowledge forms the basis for the development of new materials and molecules
and the enhancement of their properties, which in turn will advance technology, fuel
our economy, and improve our quality of life. In addition, the FY 2007 Budget seeks
$19.2 million in FY 2007 for the first full year of operations of each of four facilities
for nanoscience research and $19.4 million to continue with construction of a fifth.
The FY 2007 budget provides $171.4 million for the Spallation Neutron Source
(SNS), which enters its first full year of operation as the worlds foremost facility
for neutron scattering.
The FY 2007 budget request also includes $135.3 million for the Genomes: GTL
research, which will help us understand how natures own microbial communities
can be harnessed to remove carbon from the atmosphere, generate hydrogen for fuel,
and turn cellulose into ethanol.
Within the $4.1 billion FY 2007 budget request for Science, $143.3 million is provided to support near full operation of the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC),
which gives us a lens into the early universe, and $80.0 million is allocated to allow
near full operation of the Continuous Electron Beam Accelerator Facility (CEBAF),
which will give new insight on the quark-structure of matter. Early studies of nuclear and particle physics provided the foundation for technologies that have
changed our daily lives, giving us televisions, transistors, medical imaging devices,
and computers, and has enormous potential to lead to unexpected discoveries. The
Large Hadron Collider (LHC) at CERN, in Switzerland, is scheduled to be completed in 2007, will open a new chapter in illuminating the structure of matter,
space and time. At this new energy frontier, qualitatively new phenomena of nature
should emerge. There are many possibilitiessupersymmetry, extra space dimensions, or unexpected new symmetries of naturebut finding out which, if any, are
true can only be settled by experiment. In FY 2007, $56.8 million is requested to

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support U.S. participation in the LHC research program. The new results anticipated at the LHC can be significantly advanced by discoveries at a potential next
generation International Linear Collider (ILC) which would break new ground in
our understanding of nature. In FY 2007, funds for ILC research and development
are doubled with a funding request of $60.0 million.
The budget also includes $318.7 million to solidify Americas leadership in the economically vital field of high-performance computing, a tool increasingly integral not
only to advanced scientific research, but also to industry. The budget will provide
the pathway toward the development of computational systems that enable researchers to attack a wide range of currently intractable scientific problems through
modeling and simulation, enabling the U.S. to extend our leadership in this strategic area. Additionally, from development of the suite of scientific software and applications for the petascale computers, U.S. industry will be able to accelerate innovation, potentially saving billions in development costs and giving our economy untold competitive advantages.
We are on the verge of a revolution across multiple sciences as profound as any
humanity has witnessedone that will transform our vision of nature and, ultimately, our industry and economy.
ADVANCING AMERICAS ECONOMIC AND ENERGY SECURITY
The Energy Policy Act of 2005, signed by President Bush on August 8, 2005, advances the United States towards a secure energy future. The FY 2007 budget request of $2.6 billion to support energy programs fulfills President Bushs pledge to
promote a strong, secure economy and expand our nations energy supply by developing a diverse, dependable energy portfolio for the future.
The President has proposed the Advanced Energy Initiative to help reduce Americas dependence on foreign sources of oil and accelerate development of clean energy
technologies through targeted increases in federal investment. This initiative has
served as the blueprint for DOEs FY 2007 budget proposal.
The FY 2007 budget request of $1.2 billion for energy efficiency and renewable
energy includes two initiatives to emphasize technologies with the potential for reducing our growing reliance on oil imports and for producing clean electricity with
reduced emissions. The FY 2007 budget proposes $149.7 million for the Biofuels Initiative to develop by 2012 affordable, domestically-produced bio-based transportation
fuels, such as ethanol, from cellulosic feedstocks (such as agricultural wastes, forest
residues, and bioenergy crops), and accelerate the development of biorefineries. Biomass has the promise to deliver a plentiful domestic energy resource with economic
benefits to the agricultural sector, and to directly displace oil use. The Presidents
Solar America Initiative is proposed to be funded at $148.4 million, a substantial
increase of $65.3 million above FY 2006 funding. The increase accelerates the development of solar photovoltaics, a technology that converts energy from the sun directly into electricity. The goal of this R&D initiative is to make this emissions-free
technology cost-competitive with other electricity generation sources by 2015.
The Presidents Hydrogen Fuel Initiative is funded at $289.5 million and includes
$195.8 million for DOEs Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy program, $23.6
million for DOEs Fossil Energy program, $18.7 million for DOEs Nuclear Energy
program, $50.0 million for DOEs Science program, and $1.4 million for the Department of Transportation. Hydrogen and fuel cell technology holds the promise of an
ultra-clean and secure energy option for Americas energy future. The increase of
$40.2 million above the FY 2006 appropriation accelerates activities geared to further improve the development of hydrogen production and storage technologies, and
evaluate the use of hydrogen as an emissions-free transportation fuel source.
While the budget proposes increases for Biomass, Solar and Hydrogen research,
the Geothermal Program will be closed out in FY 2007 using prior year funds. The
2005 Energy Policy Act amended the Geothermal Steam Act of 1970 in ways that
should spur development of geothermal resources without the need for subsidized
federal research to further reduce costs.
Nuclear power, which generates 20 percent of the electricity in the United States,
contributes to a cleaner, more diverse energy portfolio. In FY 2007 a total of $632.7
million is requested for nuclear energy activities. Within the total, $250 million will
support the Global Nuclear Energy Partnership (GNEP). GNEP is a comprehensive
strategy to enable an expansion of nuclear power in the U.S. and around the world,
to promote nuclear nonproliferation goals; and to help resolve nuclear waste disposal issues.
GNEP will build upon the Administrations commitment to develop nuclear energy
technology and systems, and enhance the work of the United States and our international partners to strengthen nonproliferation efforts. GNEP will accelerate efforts to:

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Enable the expansion of emissions-free nuclear power domestically and
abroad;
Reduce the risk of proliferation; and
Utilize new technologies to recover more energy from nuclear fuel and dramatically reduce the volume of nuclear waste.
Through GNEP, the United States will work with key international partners to
develop new recycling technologies that do not result in separated plutonium, a traditional proliferation risk. Recycled fuel would then be processed through advanced
burner reactors to extract more energy, reduce waste and actually consume plutonium, dramatically reducing proliferation risks. As part of GNEP, the U.S. and
other nations with advanced nuclear technologies would ensure developing nations
a reliable supply of nuclear fuel in exchange for their commitment to forgo enrichment and reprocessing facilities of their own, also alleviating a traditional proliferation concern.
GNEP will also help resolve Americas nuclear waste disposal challenges. By recycling spent nuclear fuel, the heat load and volume of waste requiring permanent
geologic disposal would be significantly reduced, delaying the need for an additional
repository indefinitely.
The Administration continues its commitment to open and license Yucca Mountain as the Nations permanent geologic repository for spent nuclear fuel, a key complement to the GNEP strategy. Managing and disposing of commercial spent nuclear fuel in a safe and environmentally sound manner is the mission of DOEs Office of Civilian Radioactive Waste Management (RW).
To support the near-term domestic expansion of nuclear energy, the FY 2007
budget seeks $54.0 million for the Nuclear Power 2010 program to support continued industry cost-shared efforts to reduce the barriers to the deployment of new nuclear power plants. The technology focus of the Nuclear Power 2010 program is on
Generation III+ advanced light water reactor designs, which offer advancements in
safety and economics over the Generation III designs. If successful, this seven-year,
$1.1 billion project (50 percent to be cost-shared by industry) could result in a new
nuclear power plant order by 2009 and a new nuclear power plant constructed by
the private sector and in operation by 2014.
Funding of $1.8 million is provided in FY 2007 to implement a new program authorized in the recently enacted Energy Policy Act of 2005. The program will allow
DOE to offer risk insurance to protect sponsors of the first new nuclear power plants
against the financial impact of certain delays during construction or in gaining approval for operation that are beyond the sponsors control. This program would cover
100 percent of the covered cost of delay, up to $500 million for the first two new
reactors and 50 percent of the covered cost of delay, up to $250 million each, for
up to four additional reactors. This risk insurance offers project sponsors additional
certainty and incentive to provide for the construction of a new nuclear power plant
by 2014.
The FY 2007 budget request includes $31.4 million to continue to develop nextgeneration nuclear energy systems known as Generation IV (GenIV). These technologies will offer the promise of a safe, economical, and proliferation resistant
source of clean, reliable, sustainable nuclear power with the potential to generate
hydrogen for use as a fuel. Resources in FY 2007 for GenIV will be primarily focused on long-term research and development of the Very-High Temperature Reactor.
The University Reactor Infrastructure and Educational Assistance program was
designed to address declining enrollment levels among U.S. nuclear engineering programs. Since the late 1990s, enrollment levels in nuclear education programs have
tripled. In fact, enrollment levels for 2005 have reached upwards of 1,500 students,
the programs target level for the year 2015. In addition, the number of universities
offering nuclear-related programs also has increased. These trends reflect renewed
interest in nuclear power. Students will continue to be drawn into this course of
study, and universities, along with nuclear industry societies and utilities, will continue to invest in university research reactors, students, and faculty members. Consequently, federal assistance is no longer necessary, and the 2007 Budget proposes
termination of this program. The termination is also supported by the fact that the
program was unable to demonstrate results from its activities when reviewed using
the Program Assessment Rating Tool (PART), supporting the decision to spend taxpayer dollars on other priorities. Funding for providing fresh reactor fuel to universities is included in the Research Reactor Infrastructure program, housed within
Radiological Facilities Management.
Recognizing the abundance of coal as a domestic energy resource, the Department
remains committed to research and development to promote its clean and efficient

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use. U.S. coal accounts for twenty five percent of the worlds coal reserves. For the
last three years, the Department has been working to launch a public-private partnership, FutureGen, to develop a coal-based facility that will produce electricity and
hydrogen with essentially zero atmospheric emissions. This budget includes $54 million in FY 2007 and proposes an advance appropriation of $203 million for the program in FY 2008. Funding for FutureGen will be derived from rescinding $203 million in balances no longer needed to complete active projects in the Clean Coal Technology program. Better utilization of these fund balances to support FutureGen will
generate real benefits for Americas energy security and environmental quality.
The budget request for FY 2007 includes $4.6 million to support Alaska Natural
Gas Pipeline activities authorized by Congress in late 2004. Within the total amount
of $4.6 million, $2.3 million will be used to support an Office of the Federal Coordinator and the remaining $2.3 million will support the loan guarantee portion of the
program. Once constructed, this pipeline will be capable of delivering enough gas
to meet about 10 percent of the U.S. daily natural gas needs.
The budget request proposes to terminate the oil and gas research and development programs, which have sufficient market incentives for private industry support, to other energy priorities.
The Energy Policy Act of 2005 established a new mandatory oil and gas research
and development (R&D) program, called the Ultra-Deepwater and Unconventional
Natural Gas and Other Petroleum Research program, which would be funded from
federal revenues from oil and gas leases beginning in FY 2007. These R&D activities
are more appropriate for the private-sector oil and gas industry to perform. Therefore this budget proposes to repeal the program through a future legislative proposal.
The FY 2007 budget includes $124.9 million for a refocused portfolio of energy reliability and assurance activities in the Office of Electricity Delivery and Energy Reliability. This will support research and development in areas such as high temperature superconductivity, and simulation work needed to enhance the reliability and
effectiveness of the Nations power supply. This office also operates the Departments energy emergency response capability and led DOEs support effort during
and after the Gulf Coast hurricanes.
ENSURING A CLEAN ENVIRONMENT
The Bush Administration is laying a strong technological foundation to develop
cost-effective options to meet clean development and climate objectives. While maintaining core programs in renewable energy, energy efficiency, nuclear power, fusion,
and other areas, the Administration has launched important new initiatives and
programs, including President Bushs Hydrogen Fuel Initiative, the FutureGen advanced clean coal project, and advanced nuclear power. Internationally, the U.S. has
initiated a number of technology collaborations, including the Asia-Pacific Partnership for Clean Development and Climate, the Carbon Sequestration Leadership
Forum, the International Partnership for a Hydrogen Economy, the Generation IV
International Forum, and the Methane to Markets Partnership, and it joined the
ITER fusion project.
The United States leads the world in the development of climate-friendly technologies and spends more on climate change science and technology development
$2 billion and $3 billion in FY 2006, respectivelythan any other country. As a result of technological progress, we are on track to meet the Presidents goal of reducing GHG intensity by 18 percent by 2012. For FY 2007, the President is proposing,
through the Advanced Energy Initiative announced during the State of the Union
Address, large increases in funding for solar, bioenergy, hydrogen, nuclear, and advanced clean coal R&D to change the way we produce power for our homes and
automobiles and to reduce oil imports. The Departments FY 2007 budget also reflects our continuing strategy to reduce the greenhouse gas intensity of the American economy. A vital part of this strategy is the Climate Change Technology Program (CCTP). CCTP was established within the Department of Energy in the fall
of 2002 and was authorized by Congress as part of the Energy Policy Act of 2005.
The goal of CCTP is to accelerate the development of advanced, cost-effective technologies that reduce, avoid, or capture and sequester GHG emissions. Through leadership in research, development, demonstration and deployment, the U.S. approach
aims to build on Americas strengths in innovation and technology and inspire others, at home and abroad, to participate in an ambitious technological undertaking
to address climate change concerns.
CONCLUSION
The Administration recognizes that science and energy are central to our economic and national security. Indeed, energy helps drive the global economy and has

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a significant impact on our quality of life and the health of our people and our environment. The FY 2007 Budget Request balances the need to address short-term
challenges while planning for long-term actions as the President outlined in his new
initiatives, the American Competitiveness Initiative and the Advanced Energy Initiative. The request reflects our belief that basic science research must remain strong
if we are to remain competitive with our global partners. The request contains bold
new initiatives in nuclear, biomass, and solar energy. It continues the Presidents
strong commitment to clean coal, hydrogen, and fusion. The request honors our commitment to deal with civilian nuclear waste, as well as legacy waste from the Cold
War, and to further our already successful nonproliferation programs in order to
help ensure a safer world for generations to come.
BIOGRAPHY

FOR

SAMUEL W. BODMAN

Samuel Wright Bodman was sworn in as the 11th Secretary of Energy on February 1, 2005 after the United States Senate unanimously confirmed him on January 31, 2005. He leads the Department of Energy with a budget in excess of $23
billion and over 100,000 federal and contractor employees.
Previously, Secretary Bodman served as Deputy Secretary of the Treasury beginning in February 2004. He also served the Bush Administration as the Deputy Secretary of the Department of Commerce beginning in 2001. A financier and executive
by trade, with three decades of experience in the private sector, Secretary Bodman
was well suited manage the day-to-day operations of both of these cabinet agencies.
Born in 1938 in Chicago, he graduated in 1961 with a B.S. in chemical engineering from Cornell University. In 1965, he completed his ScD at Massachusetts Institute of Technology. For the next six years he served as an Associate Professor of
Chemical Engineering at MIT and began his work in the financial sector as Technical Director of the American Research and Development Corporation, a pioneer
venture capital firm. He and his colleagues provided financial and managerial support to scores of new business enterprises located throughout the United States.
From there, Secretary Bodman went to Fidelity Venture Associates, a division of
the Fidelity Investments. In 1983 he was named President and Chief Operating Officer of Fidelity Investments and a Director of the Fidelity Group of Mutual Funds.
In 1987, he joined Cabot Corporation, a Boston-based Fortune 300 company with
global business activities in specialty chemicals and materials, where he served as
Chairman, CEO, and a Director. Over the years, he has been a Director of many
other publicly owned corporations.
Secretary Bodman has also been active in public service. He is a former Director
of M.I.T.s School of Engineering Practice and a former member of the M.I.T. Commission on Education. He also served as a member of the Executive and Investment
Committees at M.I.T., a member of the American Academy of Arts & Sciences, and
a Trustee of the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum and the New England Aquarium.
Secretary Bodman is married to M. Diane Bodman. He has three children, two
stepchildren, and eight grandchildren.

Chairman BOEHLERT. Thank you very much, Mr. Secretary. Dr.


Sampson.
STATEMENT OF DR. DAVID A. SAMPSON, DEPUTY SECRETARY,
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE

Dr. SAMPSON. Good morning, Chairman Boehlert and Ranking


Member Gordon and Members of the Committee. Im delighted to
join my colleagues this morning to talk about the Presidents R&D
budget request and the critical matter of American competitiveness. Like my colleagues, Id also like to make a few brief comments and ask that my written testimony be a part of the hearing
record.
Let me say at the outset that American companies and workers
are the most competitive and innovative in the world. We have the
strongest and most diversified economy, so we begin this discussion
from a position of strength. Over the past four years, the United
States has experienced faster growth than any other major industrialized nation. Our unemployment rate of 4.7 percent is one of

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the lowest. Payrolls are growing in almost every single state. And
one of the major reasons for our success is the enormous improvements in worker productivity. In fact, U.S. productivity has had
one of the fastest five-year periods of growth in almost 40 years,
and the reason for that is that we are a nation of innovators. We
have a reputation for coming up with new technologies that make
us more productive.
But the challenge is this: how do we maintain our leadership role
in an increasingly competitive global economy? We need to attack
this problem on a number of fronts, as outlined in President Bushs
new and ambitious American Competitiveness Initiative. This initiative reflects many of the issues that were raised in December at
a national summit on competitiveness that we hosted at the United
States Department of Commerce. Chairman Boehlert and Subcommittee Chairman Ehlers, among many others, were very supportive of and participated in it. It was a highly successful meeting
with over 50 CEOs and university presidents and officials from virtually every federal research agency participating.
At the core of the Presidents competitiveness initiative are major
increases in Federal R&D funding over the next 10 years, and let
me focus on what were proposing at the Commerce Department for
fiscal year 2007. First, at the National Institute of Standards and
Technology, the Presidents budget calls for a 24 percent increase
in funding, over $104 million for our core laboratory programs and
the facilities to support them. This funding will allow scientists at
NIST, who have won three Nobel prizes in recent years, to advance
research in promising fields. For example, $72 million would go for
cutting edge efforts in areas such as nanotechnology, hydrogen
fuels and quantum information. These initiatives hold the promise
of leading to new cancer therapies, fuel cells for pollution-free cars,
or unbreakable codes to protect electronic transactions.
Were planning to invest in critical national assets, notably the
Center for Neutron Research, and were also seeking $32 million to
maintain and upgrade our labs, including the aging facilities in
Boulder, Colorado.
At the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, were
requesting a $345 million increase to our base programs, in order
to continue improving key predictions and warnings for a variety
of weather, climate and water conditions, working towards sustainable fisheries and supporting safe and efficient transportation. Specifically, were seeking increases in several high priority areas, including $112 million for the next generation of weather satellites
that I know this committee has great interest in, $108 million for
ecosystem management, $46 million for weather and water information, including $12 million to operate the Tsunami Warning Program, and $24 million for climate services to better predict and better inform the public about droughts.
Mr. Chairman, President Bush, the Commerce Department and
this Administration are committed to maintaining Americas leadership in the global economy, and one of the best ways to do that
is by creating an environment that encourages innovation and risk
taking, and that focuses R&D spending on the most promising and
productive fields. And we believe our R&D budget at the Department of Commerce significantly advances those goals. I look for-

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ward to working with the Committee as we move forward on what
I believe is one of the most crucial issues we face as a nation and
I obviously look forward to answering any questions that you or the
Committee may have.
[The prepared statement of Dr. Sampson follows:]
PREPARED STATEMENT

OF

DAVID A. SAMPSON

Mr. Chairman and Members of the Committee, I am pleased to join you today as
we examine the Administrations FY 2007 budget request for research and development at the Department of Commerce. I want to thank the Committee, especially
Chairman Boehlert, for your continued support and leadership on innovation issues.
You have been a constant and strong voice for the science and technology community, and I look forward to continuing our work together to ensure that America remains the world leader in the science and technology field.
INTRODUCTION
Innovation and competitiveness drive the Nations economy. The Department of
Commerce provides the tools to help maximize U.S. competitiveness and ensure the
economic health of American industries, workers, and consumers.
I was pleased to play a role in the National Summit on Competitiveness that was
held at the Department of Commerce on December 6, 2005. The purpose of the summit was to raise awareness about the seriousness of the global competitiveness challenge and to promote an action agenda to ensure continued U.S. leadership in innovation. Our major international competitors are committing significant resources to
their scientific and technological infrastructure, and increasing their ability to compete with the United States. This has led to a growing concern among industry and
academia that America should increase its response to the changing competitive
landscape.
The summit involved key leaders from Government including Commerce Secretary Carlos Gutierrez, Energy Secretary Sam Bodman, Education Secretary Margaret Spellings, Labor Secretary Elaine Chao and National Science Foundation Director Arden Bement. About 50 corporate CEOs and university leaders joined with
these Government officials to discuss actions necessary to strengthen Americas innovation capacity, particularly in science and technology research, education, workforce development, and the deployment of new technologies.
In his State of the State of the Union address, President Bush made it clear that
we are faced with a choice in responding to the increasingly global economy. We can
pursue the path of isolationism or we can choose to compete with confidence. President Bush has chosen the latter path by announcing the American Competitiveness
Initiative (ACI), which will help ensure that America meets this goal and remains
a leader in science and technology advances. The centerpiece of the ACI is the Presidents strong commitment to double over 10 years investment in key federal agencies that support basic research programs in the physical sciences and engineering
the National Science Foundation, the Department of Energys Office of Science, and
the Department of Commerces National Institute of Standards and Technology
(NIST).
Under the ACI, NIST is slated for $535 million for its laboratory research and
facilities appropriations. This budget proposal includes a $104.1 million increase
above NISTs FY 2007 baseor more than 24 percent. If appropriated this would
be the largest dollar increase ever for NISTs laboratory research.
The increase reflects the importance of the work that NIST undertakes to promote
competitiveness and innovationwith the aim of improving economic security and
improving the quality of life. It also reflects the importance that this Administration
places on improving the environment for innovation and competitiveness. This commitmentas evidenced by the NIST budget proposalis extraordinary in a budget
that is mindful of the need to be stringent and restrain federal spending and reduce
the deficit.
This funding will support the work of 3,900 scientists and engineers from Government, industry and universitiesan increase of 600 researchers over FY 2006. Their
work in areas including nanotechnology, hydrogen and quantum information will
lead to the innovations of tomorrow, such as much more efficient batteries, and
smaller computer chips to power our digital devices, as well as fuel cells to power
pollution-free cars and unbreakable codes to protect electronic financial transactions
and video transmissions.
The Department also proudly houses another extremely important science agency,
the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA). NOAAs mission is

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to understand and predict changes in the Earths environment, as well as to conserve and manage wisely the coastal and marine resources to meet our nations economic, social, and environmental needs. The work performed at NOAA touches the
daily lives of every person in the United States and in much of the world. The agency:

provides weather, water, and climate services;


manages and protects marine resources and ecosystems;
conducts atmospheric, climate, and ecosystems research;
promotes efficient and environmentally safe commerce and transportation;
and
provides emergency response and vital information in support of homeland security.
In addition to using science and technology to create jobs, stimulate innovation
and improve economic prosperity, the Department is also directing resources toward
disaster prediction and prevention, to better understand and minimize the loss of
life and property from disasters.
The 2005 Atlantic hurricane season was the busiest on record and extended the
current period of increased hurricane activity which began in 1995a trend likely
to continue for years to come. This season shattered records that have stood for decadesthe most named storms, most hurricanes and most category five storms. Arguably, it was the most devastating hurricane season the country has experienced
in modern times.
The devastation along the Gulf Coast from Hurricanes Katrina, Rita and Wilma
is of historic proportions. It is catastrophic. However, without NOAAs forecasts and
warnings, and its extensive recovery activities after the passage of each storm, the
devastation and loss of life would have been far greater. As Chairman Ehlers himself has noted, NOAA alone pays for itself over and over in terms of the protection
it gives to people and to property.
NOAAs forecasts and warnings for the 2005 Gulf hurricanes pushed the limits
of state-of-the-art hurricane prediction. Our continuous research efforts, including
observations, modeling, and expanded computational resources at NOAA, and in
partnership with other federal agencies, have led to our current predictive capabilities and improved ways of describing uncertainty in prediction. But NOAAs work
does not end there. NOAA assessed damage from storms, as well as the impact to
the areas fisheries. It continues to support hazardous materials containment and
abatement efforts, provide necessary data critical for post-storm response and recovery operations, and assist dredging operations, allowing our nations ports and waterways impacted by the storm to open.
NOAAs science is just as critical to our understanding and management of our
oceans. In December 2004, the Administration released the U.S. Ocean Action Plan
(Plan), in response to the U.S. Commission on Ocean Policys report entitled, An
Ocean Blueprint for the 21st Century. NOAA will continue to play a key role in implementing many of the Plans ocean policy measures, including the establishment
of a coordinated ocean governance structure. Chairman Ehlers has noted that these
are critical issues crucial to the survival of humans on the planet when we consider
the extent and the complexity of the oceans and life on the planet. Consistent with
this approach, the Administration continues to support Commerces leadership role
in oceans policy and activities by promoting passage of a NOAA Organic Act.
NOAAs global leadership extends to monitoring the planet through the development of the Global Earth Observation System of Systems (GEOSS). Last April, the
United States released its first-ever plan to monitor the Earth. As a collaborative
effort of 15 federal agencies and three White House offices, the 10-year Strategic
Plan for the U.S. Integrated Earth Observation System will, over time, benefit people and economies around the world by improving the ability to monitor, understand
and predict changes to the Earth. The completion of this plan marks a significant
milestone in the ongoing development of GEOSS, involving nearly 50 other countries, the European Commission and 29 international organizations. The GEOSS
will provide NOAA and others with the tools to better understand our planet
through an integrated, comprehensive, and sustained Earth-observation program.
NOAA also serves as the lead coordinating agency for the U.S. Climate Change
Science Program (CCSP) which integrates a broad range of climate-related observations, field studies and computer model projections sponsored by 13 federal agencies.
CCSP has a goal of substantially improved understanding of both the causes and
the potential effects of climate variability and change, on time scales extending from
weeks to decades. NOAAs mission also includes the implementation of climate pre-

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dictive and interpretive services for a wide range of applications, thereby providing
significant benefits to users in several sectors of the economy.
HIGHLIGHTS OF THE FY 2007 BUDGET REQUEST
The FY 2007 Presidents budget request for the Technology Administration is
$582.8 million, including $1.5 million for the Office of the Under Secretary and
$581.3 million for NIST. TA and its various components seek to maximize technologys contribution to economic growth, high-wage job creation, and the social
well-being of the United States. TA and NIST serve as advocates for technological
innovation and analyze the factors that affect our competitiveness.
For NOAA, we request a total of $3.684 billion. The request is an increase of $345
million or 10 percent above NOAAs FY 2007 base. This FY 2007 request reflects
our continuing effort to better serve the American people by restraining spending
and advancing only the most mission-critical services. The NOAA staff of dedicated
professionals, working with extramural researchers and our international partners,
is extending our knowledge of climate change, expanding meteorological prediction
capabilities, improving coastal resource management, charting more of our oceans
and coasts, and enhancing environmental stewardship.
For the remainder of my testimony I would like to focus on the Departments
science and technology budget priorities for the upcoming fiscal year as reflected in
TA/NISTs and NOAAs requests. The Commerce Departments budget illustrates
our commitment to preserve the core competencies of TA, NIST and NOAA, and to
promote competitiveness, innovation and economic growth.
Technology Administration Programs
The Technology Administration and its various componentsNIST, the National
Technical Information Service, and the Office of the Under Secretaryseek to maximize technologys contribution to economic growth, high-wage job creation, and the
social well-being of the United States.
National Institute of Standards and Technology
NIST has long been a center for high-impact basic research, as evidenced by the
three Nobel Prizes that have been awarded to its scientists in the last decade. NIST
research has led to innovations that we can see today, from the high-density magnetic storage technology that makes devices such as computer hard drives and mp3
players so compact, to protective body armor for law enforcement officers and diagnostic screening for cancer patients.
NISTs Scientific and Technical Research and Services ($467.0 million)
The NIST budget is divided into three appropriations, the first of which is $467.0
million covering Scientific and Technical Research and Services (STRS). This includes $459.4 million for NISTs laboratory research, which is the core of NISTs operations. Through these laboratories, NIST plays a unique role in the Nations scientific, industrial and business communities. Scientists, engineers, health care professionals, manufacturers and business people compare and trade data, test results,
manufactured goods, and commodities with greater confidence when NIST is
present in the backgroundanchoring the national measurement and standards
system that is the language of research and commerce.
This is the oldest and one of the most important of NISTs long-standing missions.
It affects every American who goes to the store, buys gasoline or pays a utility bill,
because each year $4.5 trillion in wholesale and retail trade is measured against
standards that are ultimately traceable to NIST. It affects:
every American whose job depends on the ability of our industries to innovate
and to compete in global tradebecause product quality and productivity depend on the ability to measure and precisely control the production process,
and because more and more high-tech and high-value products are subject to
foreign regulations that require measurements traceable to internationally
recognized standards;
every American who relies on fundamental business services and communications devicesbecause so many of these services depend upon NIST measurements and standards in ways that are invisible to most consumers and service sector employees; and
every American concerned with homeland securitybecause NIST is being
called upon increasingly to provide the measurement assurance behind sensitive detection systems for chemical, biological, explosive or radiological
weapons.

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It is a vital mission, and one that is far from static, because a modern, progressive, industrialized society imposes constant demands for improvements in its measurements and its standards. The pace of Americas technological innovation both
drives and is driven by our ability to observe and to measure, and NISTs infrastructure is vital to accelerating that innovation.
NISTs reputation and past accomplishments are known worldwide because of its
laboratory-based work, and its level of excellence is the goal for all measurement
research institutions. NIST is increasingly focused on the most intriguing and challenging technologies and industries of the new century, and the measurements and
standards that will be crucial if U.S. industry is to innovate, compete, and excel in
the future.
The requested increases for the NIST laboratories match the Presidents R&D priorities and the Nations measurements and standards needs. Discoveries and advances in nanotechnology and manufacturing supply chain integration have the potential to dramatically transform manufacturing and business industries through innovation and productivity improvements. Similarly, developments and discoveries in
quantum information science, hydrogen research, and new imaging techniques for
materials and medical applications will potentially improve not only the life of every
American, but will also have an impact on the future of people throughout the
world. The ability of U.S. companies to sell their goods and services overseas to
growing global markets will depend on NISTs work to open markets for U.S. workers and exporters. The complex information systems that are crucial for our daily
lives will be more secure with the assistance of NISTs computer security expertise.
These are the challenges and opportunities that face the Nation and NIST in the
21st Century, challenges that NIST will be better equipped to address as a result
of this budget.
The Presidents American Competitiveness Initiative for NIST totals $104.1 million in enhancements for the core NIST programs including the NIST laboratories
and facilities improvements. The major NIST focus of the American Competitiveness
Initiative includes the following:
Targeting the most strategic and rapidly developing technologies ($45 million)
Enabling Nanotechnology from Discovery to Manufacture ($20 million),
Enabling the Hydrogen Economy ($10 million),
Quantum Information Science: Infrastructure for 21st Century Innovation ($9 million),
Innovations in Measurement Science ($4 million), and
Cyber Security: Innovative Technologies for National Security ($2 million).
Increasing the capacity and capability of critical national assets ($27 million)
NIST Center for Neutron Research (NCNR) Expansion and Reliability
Improvements: A National Need ($22 million including $10 million in
STRS for instrumentation development and $12 million in CRF for design of new guide hall), and
Synchrotron Measurement Science and Technology: Enabling Next Generation Materials Innovation ($5 million).
Meeting near-term needs ($12 million)
Manufacturing Innovation through Supply Chain Integration ($2 million),
Structural Safety in Hurricanes, Fires, and Earthquakes ($2 million),
International Standards and Innovation: Opening Markets for American
Workers and Exporters ($2 million),
Bioimaging: A 21st Century Toolbox for Medical Technology ($4 million),
and
Biometrics: Identifying Friend or Foe ($2 million).
NIST facilities improvement plan ($20.1 million)
Phase I design of the renovation of the main Building 1, in Boulder, Colorado ($6.3 million)
Design and limited renovation of Building 4 in Boulder, Colorado ($3.8
million), and
Increasing the base for Safety, Capacity, Maintenance and Major Repairs
of NIST facilities ($10 million).

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I want to emphasize and provide additional information about several of these important initiatives, to explain why the President has decided that they merit such
an investment in tight budget times.
Enabling Nanotechnology from Discovery to Manufacture (+$20 million)
Nanotechnology is anticipated to be the major breakthrough technology in the
21st centurywith the nanotechnology-related market predicted to exceed $1 trillion globally by 2015. Within the next 10 years, experts expect at least half of the
newly designed advanced materials and manufacturing processes to be at the
nanoscale. The United States is making significant investments in nanoscience and
nanotechnology, and it is essential that we rapidly and efficiently transfer our basic
scientific discoveries to practice within our manufacturing sector. Globally, no one
country or region has a significant technological lead in this areawith the European Union, Japan, and other countries each investing about the same amount of
government resources as the United States.
Successfully translating nanoscale discoveries into manufactured products will be
critically dependent on:
developing process technologies to efficiently and reliably produce commercially significant quantities of nanomaterials,
developing advanced measurement and process-control technologiesincluding standard reference materialsto monitor production processes and for
quality control, and
close cooperation and interaction between the research sector, the manufacturing sector, and the national measurement standards system.
Enabling the Hydrogen Economy (+$10 million)
President Bush issued a challenge to the Nations scientists and engineers in his
2003 State of the Union speech to overcome technical obstacles so that the first car
driven by a child born today could be powered by hydrogen, and pollution-free. Hydrogen fuels are expected to reduce the environmental impact of energy use as well
as lower dependence on foreign energy sources. NIST has the technical expertise,
unique facilities, and the mandate from Congress needed to make substantial contributions toward a robust hydrogen economy.
For the past 50 years, NIST has been a leading provider of data on the chemical
and physical properties of hydrogen. NISTs Center for Neutron Research (NCNR)
is a premier facility for the study of hydrogen. The NCNR already is being used in
conjunction with major U.S. manufacturers to study the flow of hydrogen through
operating fuel cells to help improve the efficiency and durability of these devices.
NIST is, in fact, the lead agency for weights and measures for vehicle fuels and will
need to develop physical reference standards, calibration services, and new consensus standards to help ensure equitable trade of hydrogen in the marketplace.
The safe handling, production, and distribution of hydrogen presents significant
challengeswhich is why Congress has charged NIST with helping to develop
standards for pipeline safety and reliability. NISTs expertise in building and fire
research will be essential for developing model building codes that foster adoption
of hydrogen technologies in local communities.
Moreover, NISTs expertise in manufacturing will be critical for advancing hydrogen process control technologies and the design of fuel cells that can be manufactured cost-effectively. That is why the President is requesting additional funding for
NISTs laboratory work in this area as part of the effort to achieve the vision of a
hydrogen economy.
Quantum Information Science: Infrastructure for 21st Century Innovation (+$9
million)
Americas future prosperity and economic security may rely in part on the exotic
properties of some of the smallest particles in nature to accomplish feats in physics,
information science, and mathematics that are impossible with todays technology.
Research in quantum information seeks to control and use these properties for scientific and societal benefits. Researchers are working toward quantum computers
that can solve problems in seconds that todays best supercomputers could not solve
in years. Much like the way computers of today greatly improved our quality of life,
quantum computers of the future will solve problems beyond our current imagination. We do know that they will create unbreakable codes to protect commercial
communications, including financial transactions and video transmissions, but we
also believe they will do much more. Advances in quantum information science have
the potential to expand and strengthen the U.S. economy and security in the 21st
century just as transistors and lasers did in the last century.

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NIST is a leader in quantum research with several world-renowned scientists, including three Nobel laureatesand it is perfectly positioned to play a more critical
role in advancing the quantum realm of science and harnessing its power to achieve
benefits for the economy and for our security.
Under the FY 2007 initiative proposed by the President, NIST will accelerate the
field by expanding its in-house research efforts and by enhancing its effort to exploit
the fundamental properties of quantum systems to develop new metrology tools and
methods. Moreover, NIST will establish a Joint Quantum Institute to leverage
NISTs own expertise and resources with those of a university and the National Security Agency. Specific, practical benefits will include: improved security for electronic commerce; maintenance of the U.S. lead in computing and information processing; improved accuracy for electrical and other standards based on better understanding of quantum systems; and establishment of U.S. industry as the leader in
the emerging field of quantum engineering.
It takes wonderful, talented peoplethe best in the worldto conduct the kind
of Nobel Prize-winning, McArthur Genius Award-winning, National Medal of
Science-winning work that is done by NIST. It also takes facilities where this work
gets done, which is one reason that the Presidents Budget for 2007 includes $68
millionincluding a $32.1 million program increase (including $12 million in the
NIST Center for Neutron Research initiative and $20.1 million for the NIST Facilities Improvement Planfor NISTs Construction and Research Facilities (CRF) account). Moreover, these investments at NIST also support industrial innovation and
competitiveness by making available special research facilities used by scientists
and engineers from industry, universities, and other agencies. Congress has helped
NIST to tackle some of its most pressing facilities needs, resulting in two relatively
new additions. The NIST campuses in Boulder, Colorado, and Gaithersburg, Maryland, are showing their age (50 and 40 years old, respectively). Additional investments are needed if these sites are to remain fully serviceable and allow the researchers that use these facilities to be as productive as possible.
The Presidents proposal for CRF includes resources for safety, maintenance, repair, and facilities upgrades. The CRF request would fund:
Construction and renovations at the NIST Center for Neutron Research, tied
in with the parallel R&D initiative in STRS ($12 million),
Increases for the NIST safety, capacity, maintenance and major repairs
(SCMMR) budget to repair aging facilities ($10 million), and
Building renovations at the agencys Boulder, Colorado, site ($10.1 million).
This is a repeat request that we are making for these sorely needed renovations. We have been moving forward as quickly as possible to complete the
needed projects.
Finally, the President is requesting $46.3 million to fund the Hollings Manufacturing Extension Partnership program. This is a reduction from the FY 2006 level
that would be made in order to address the Nations most pressing funding needs
in an austere fiscal environment. NIST will focus the FY 2007 funding to maintain
an effective network of centers with an emphasis on activities that promote innovation and competitiveness in small manufacturers.
The FY 2006 appropriations and estimated recoveries will be sufficient to meet
all existing obligations of the Advanced Technology Program and to phase it out. Accordingly, no FY 2007 funds are requested.
Office of the Under Secretary ($1.5 million)
The key administrative and policy operations within the Office of the Under Secretary will be streamlined. TA will remain an effective advocate for technology within the Department of Commerce. TA, for instance, was the lead office at the Commerce Department responsible for working on the recent competitiveness summit
hosted at the Department.
National Technical Information Service (fee supported)
The National Technical Information Service (NTIS), the third unit of the Technology Administration, is a repository of much of the Governments technical information that is used by the science and technical communities. NTIS maintains, sells
and distributes a collection of scientific and technical information from various federal agencies. NTIS covers its operating costs through fees for its products and services; in keeping with past practice, there is no FY 2007 appropriation request.
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Programs
Americans look to NOAA for a wide variety of services and support ranging from
the local weather forecast, to a sustainable supply of quality seafood, to the safe

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transport of millions of tons of water-borne cargo. Our scientists and managers also
help keep the coastline safe and economically vibrant, and maintain detailed research on the climate from the frozen Arctic to the depths of the oceans.
NOAAs budget proposes increases for the following high priority areas:
Satellite Continuity (+$124 million for GOESR and NPOESS)
Ecosystem Management (+$108 million, including $19.7 million for fisheries
activities in the Gulf of Mexico and $6 million for the Open Rivers Initiative)
Weather and Water Information (+$46 million, including $12 million to complete and operate the Tsunami Warning System and $1.4 million to operate
and maintain Hurricane Buoys)
Climate Services (+$24 million, including $6.5 million for High-Performance
Computing and $4 million for the National Integrated Drought Information
System)
Commerce and Transportation (+$19.5 million, including $10.5 million to address nautical survey backlog and $5 million for critical mapping, charting,
and data improvements)
Improved facilities (+$30 million)
Mission Support/People and Infrastructure
The backbone of the NOAA infrastructure is our integrated observation effort, including building state-of-the-art satellite programs. NOAA serves with NASA and
OSTP as lead for the Federal Government in developing our U.S. integrated observing strategy. Our efforts include state-of-the-art satellite programs, supported by a
requested increase of $20.3 million for the tri-agency National Polar-orbiting Operational Environmental Satellite (NPOESS) program, which will replace the Polar
Orbiting System (POES) program after completion of the current KN series of satellites.
As you are aware, the NPOESS program has encountered significant cost and
schedule overruns, which are not included in the FY 2007 request. NPOESS is currently undergoing a recertification review in accordance with Nunn-McCurdy DOD
regulatory requirements. This review will shape the way forward, and consequently,
the Administrations future budget requirements. The Department of Defense request for NPOESS matches the NOAA request for FY 2007, as part of the shared
funding arrangement.
We are also developing the next generation of geostationary satellites to maintain
continuity of satellite data into the future. The FY 2007 NOAA budget requests
$113.4 million to move the GEOSR series satellites into the acquisition and operations phase of its procurement.
Ecosystems ($107.6 million increase)
The FY 2007 Budget request includes significant resources for NOAAs ocean and
coastal programs, and fisheries and protected species activities in support of the
Presidents U.S. Ocean Action Plan. NOAAs primary initiative is to advance ecosystem-based approaches to resource management. By applying innovative strategies to improve internal and external coordination and integration based on ecosystem principles, and by establishing baselines and integrated observations of ecosystem indicators, NOAA will increase the effectiveness of its many program activities intended to produce healthy and productive ecosystems that benefit society. Initiating ecosystem approaches to management requires better monitoring and characterization, and more effective integration and collaboration among NOAA programs and its external partners.
Highlights of the FY 2007 request in this area include $19.7 million to support
fisheries programs in the Gulf of Mexico. As the Gulf region rebuilds, these programs will ensure that adequate science and management resources are available
to promote sustainable fisheries. In addition, the request includes $6 million for the
Open Rivers Initiative in support of cooperative conservation. This will be a competitive grant program that utilizes a community-based model to remove obsolete
river barriers in coastal states. NOAA will also extend its Habitat Restoration Program to the Great Lakes, expand dedicated fishery access privilege programs, improve regional collaboration and planning of coastal state managers to improve
management of coastal watersheds and marine resource areas, and enhance observing and information delivery systems to inform the public as part of the U.S. Integrated Ocean Observing System (IOOS). These increases allow NOAA to meet our
responsibilities as stewards of living marine resources for the benefit of the Nation,
through science-based conservation and management and the protection of ecosystem health.

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Climate ($24.1 million increase)
NOAA requests $24.1 million increase (for a total of $230 million) for programs
and activities increasing our ability to predict and assess current and future impacts
of climate events such as droughts, floods, and trends in extreme climate events.
These programs provide vital information for farmers, utilities, land managers,
weather risk industry, fisheries resource managers, and other customers to make
better decisions. One such investment will enable NOAA to continue building the
global component of the Integrated Earth Observing System. Advancing observing
systems toward global coverage will allow NOAA to better understand the state of
the climate system and improve climate predictions. Another key investment is the
request for $4.0 million to go towards drought impact research for the National Integrated Drought Information System (NIDIS), which will aid decision makers faced
with drought and water resource management issues. The request also includes $7
million to establish the capacity to produce consistent and continually updated climate analysis data, deliver regular and systematic explanations of the state of the
climate system, and advance understanding and predictions of climate extremes.
NOAAs FY 2007 Budget request includes an increase for Data Centers and Information Services, which provide access to the worlds largest collection of data, including climate data, to more than 50,000 users per year. The request also includes
an increase of $6.5 million for high-performance computing and communication,
which will allow NOAA to use advanced computing power to forecast the Nations
weather and climate, to model ecosystems and the ocean, to and disseminate environmental information.
Weather and Water ($46.1 million increase)
The FY 2007 budget includes $46.1 million in increases to sustain and improve
weather forecasts and warnings. NOAAs weather and water services make a tremendous contribution to the Nations health and economic vitality. For instance,
weather warnings protect the public from extreme environmental events while forecasts are essential to weather- and climate-sensitive industries, which account for
one-third of the Nations GDP. As an example of the benefits, during a typical hurricane season NOAAs efforts save the Nation $3 billion. Annually, drought costs the
Nation $6 to $8 billion, and floods cost $5 billion and cause more than 80 deaths.
There are estimates that indicate that the United States can reap a 12-to-1 return
annually for every dollar invested in better water resource forecasting.
Support of the FY 2007 budget request will strengthen NOAAs ability to sustain
critical services and to provide crucial enhanced services. Warning improvements include $12.4 million to operate the U.S. Tsunami Warning System and expand its
scope from the Pacific to the Atlantic and Caribbean. We will use $2.5 million to
provide critical infrastructure protection for the National Weather Service Telecommunications Gateway (NWSTG). Funds will be used to implement a telecommunications network solution which resolves an existing single-point-of-failure
issue associated with the commercial service provider to the NWSTG. This network
solution will ensure uninterrupted delivery of critical meteorological data necessary
for the protection of life and property. The budget request includes $3.5 million to
support the Wind Profiler Network, which will fund engineering design and award
a development contract for new frequency compliant transmitters, develop contingency plans in coordination with data users for the loss of Profiler data in the case
of potential search and rescue satellite (SARSAT) interference, and provide operations and maintenance for the current Wind Profiler Network.
Commerce and Transportation ($19.5 million increase)
The U.S. economy relies upon an intermodal transportation network of ship, rail,
highway, and air transport to move people, cargo and commerce to, from and across
the Nation. This movement is heavily dependent upon the information and services
that NOAA providesweather and ice forecasts, real-time and forecast water level
conditions and obstruction surveys, navigational charts, hazardous materials response, and satellite search and rescue. From 1990 to 2003, the value of U.S. international merchandise trade increased an average six percent annually, from $889
billion to about $2 trillion (in current dollars). The U.S. Marine Transportation System (MTS) carried 95 percent of this trade by volume and 41 percent by value in
2003, more than any other transportation mode. The Nation also loses at least $4
billion annually due to economic inefficiencies resulting from weather-related airtraffic delays, and the injuries, loss of life, and property damage from surface weather-related crashes cost an average of $42 billion annually. NOAAs products and
services help maintain the efficient flow of transportation and commerce.
Among our Commerce and Transportation programs, we are requesting $2.0 million to continue implementation of the National Vertical Datum Transformation

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Tool database, or VDATUM. VDATUM allows Federal, State, and local government
agencies to share geospatial data more effectively and benefits NOAAs modernization efforts. The FY 2007 budget request also includes $1.9 million to continue
NOAAs efforts to provide Electronic Navigational Charts (ENCs). Sustained funding
at this level will enable NOAA to cover all U.S. waters by 2010. In addition, $2.7
million is requested for tide and current data; $2.0 million of these funds will be
used to rebuild and strengthen the National Water Level Observation Networks
(NWLON) ability to provide navigation and storm tide information throughout extreme weather and water events such as hurricanes. Several stations were damaged
or destroyed during the 2005 hurricane season. Lastly, $1.2 million is requested for
Aviation Weather, which will fund procurement and fielding of 75 additional water
vapor sensors as part of an Integrated Upper Air Observing System to continue to
improve U.S. aviation safety and economic efficiencies. Water vapor information is
critical to depicting weather hazards and reducing forecast errors. The remaining
$0.7 million will enable NOAA to maintain the existing 13 PORTS as well as continue expanding the program for the next several years.
CONCLUSION
We are pleased that the Presidents Budget reflects the important work of the
science agencies housed in the Department of Commerce. The Departments research and development budget includes a number of investments critical to our nation. Thank you for the opportunity to appear here today. I welcome any questions
that you may have.
BIOGRAPHY

FOR

DAVID A. SAMPSON

David A. Sampson is the Deputy Secretary of the U.S. Commerce Department. Dr.
Sampson was nominated by President George W. Bush on April 1, 2005 and confirmed by the U.S. Senate, on July 22. He was also designated by President Bush
on June 16, 2005 as a Member of the Board of Directors of the Overseas Private
Investment Corporation.
Previously, he served as Assistant Secretary of Commerce for Economic Development and head of the Economic Development Administration, which leads the Federal Governments efforts to promote economic growth and regional competitiveness.
As Deputy Secretary, Sampson serves as the Departments chief operating officer,
with responsibility for the day-to-day management of its approximately $6.5 billion
budget, 13 operating units, and 38,000 employees. In that capacity, Sampson is also
a member of the Presidents Management Council. The Departments portfolio is extremely varied. Its missions include promoting U.S. exports, negotiating and enforcing international trade agreements and regulating sensitive goods and technologies
exports.
The Department also is the Nations steward of the oceans and coastal marine resources; weather forecaster and climate researcher; and the lead policy agency on
technology and telecommunications and administrator for federal radio frequency
spectrum. In addition, Department bureaus conduct the national census; track the
economy and release regular updates; issue patents and trademarks; develop and
apply technology, measurements, and industrial standards; promote economic
growth in distressed communities; and encourage minority business development.
Prior to joining the Bush Administration in August 2001, Sampson worked in both
the private and public sectors, serving as President and Chief Executive Officer of
the Arlington, Texas Chamber of Commerce; Chairman of the Texas Council on
Workforce and Economic Competitiveness; and Vice Chair of the Texas Strategic
Economic Development Planning Commission in then-Governor Bushs Administration.
Sampson is a graduate of David Lipscomb University, the New Orleans Baptist
Theological Seminary and earned his doctorate at Abilene Christian University. He
and his family currently reside in Northern Virginia.

Chairman BOEHLERT. Thank you very much. Dr. Bement.


STATEMENT OF DR. ARDEN L. BEMENT, JR., DIRECTOR,
NATIONAL SCIENCE FOUNDATION

Dr. BEMENT. Ranking Member Gordon and Members of the Committee, thank you for this opportunity to provide you with some
context for our 2007 budget request. As I mentioned to Chairman
Boehlert before the hearing, my face muscles are getting sore from

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wearing a constant grin, and its always a special pleasure to come
before the Committee when we have a budget request such as the
one we have and will be discussing today.
Youre well aware the Presidents request for NSF for 2007 is
$6.02 billion, or a 7.9 percent increase over last year, and the first
installment in the Administrations planned ten-year doubling of
NSFs budget. Mr. Chairman, were grateful to you for your personal leadership and also for the Committees leadership on this
issue and looking forward to working with you in the months and
years ahead to achieve this ambitious goal.
NSF has been selected to play major roles in the Presidents
American Competitiveness Initiative. These include investing in a
generation of fundamental discoveries that produce valuable and
marketable technologies, providing world-class facilities and infrastructure that are essential to transform research and enable discovery, and preparing the Nations scientific, technological, engineering and mathematics workforce for the 21st century, while improving the quality of math and science education in Americas
schools.
By its longstanding practice of integrating graduate research
with education, NSF will facilitate the direct transfer of new concepts to the private sector as graduate students involved in their
discovery enter the workforce. The Presidents request for NSF will
increase funding for Research and Related Activities by 7.7 percent
to $4.7 billion. This should enable NSF to reverse a decline in our
success rate by providing 500 more research grants and 6400 additional scientists, students, post-doctoral fellows, and technicians to
contribute to the innovation enterprise. This increase will also bolster our ability to fund more high-risk ideas. We already make
available up to five percent of research funds for small grants for
exploratory research. Combined with targeted activities throughout
the research directorates, more than nine percent of the research
budget specifically challenges the community to take risks and engage in research at the interdisciplinary frontiers.
We will also make investments in several Administration priority
initiatives. We are pleased to be the lead agency in two of the Nations major physical science research programs, the Networking
and Information Technology Research and Development Initiative,
or NITRD, and the National Nanotechnology Initiative, or NNI.
Funding in the request for NITRD will increase by 11.5 percent, or
$93.4 million, and NNI will increase by $29.4 million, or 8.6 percent.
Within our investment that supports unique tools and worldclass facilities are two new starts in our Major Research Equipment and Facilities Construction account. We are requesting $56
million for the Alaska Region Research Vessel, a ship designed to
conduct essential scientific studies in waters that are home to enormous fisheries and challenged by climate change. The budget also
includes $13.5 million for the Ocean Observatories Initiative, which
will revolutionize our understanding of the complex interplay
among oceans, geology and life in the seas. Both facilities respond
to recommendations from the Congressionally-mandated U.S. Commission on Ocean Policy. The budget includes $597 million, an increase of 15 percent, for new cyberinfrastructure, including $50

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million for transitioning from terascale to petascale computing. In
addition, $35 million is included for NSFs Cyber Trust Program,
to improve the reliability of computer systems, even if under attack. These programs will be conducted in close cooperation with
the Department of Energy, DARPA and NASA.
Yet another aspect of NSFs role in the Presidents initiative will
focus on preparing a technological workforce and improving the
math and science education of children. Although the Education
and Human Resources account increases $19 million, or 2.5 percent
over last year, this does not reflect the total investment in education activities at NSF. After accounting for various base changes
such as the planned $17 million phase-down in the Math and
Science Partnership Program, and contributions from the research
account, K to 12 investments actually increased by over 10 percent,
and investments in undergraduate education increased by over six
percent. The budget request proposes significant increases in all
other Congressionally-mandated programs such as graduate fellowships and traineeships, research experiences for undergraduates
and teachers, faculty early career development, Robert Noyce
Scholarships, advanced technology education in two-year colleges,
and informal science education. Investments to broaden participation of women, under-represented minorities and persons with disabilities will increase throughout the foundation to $640 million,
with nearly $100 million from the research account. These investments will focus on proven programs that have shown success in
increasing the pathways for broadening participation.
Mr. Chairman, I am very aware and appreciative of the Committees longstanding bipartisan support for NSF, and Ill be happy to
respond to any questions.
[The prepared statement of Dr. Bement follows:]
PREPARED STATEMENT

OF

ARDEN L. BEMENT, JR.

Chairman Boehlert, Ranking Member Gordon, and Members of the Committee,


thank you for this opportunity to provide you with some context for our FY 2007
budget request. It is always a pleasure to come before you, but it is a greater pleasure when we have a budget request such as the one before us today.
As you no doubt know, the Presidents request for NSF for 2007 is $6.02 billion,
or a 7.9 percent increase over the appropriation enacted last year. As part of the
Presidents American Competitiveness Initiative, this request represents the first
step in the Administrations firm commitment to doubling the NSF budget over the
next 10 years.
The ACI encompasses all of NSFs investments in research and education. These
investmentsin discovery, learning, and innovationhave a longstanding and proven track record of boosting the Nations economic vitality and competitive strength.
Our focus for 2007 emphasizes four priorities. The first of theseAdvancing the
frontieris at the heart of everything NSF does. In a science and technology-based
world, to divert our focus from the frontier is to put our nations global preeminence
in science and engineering at peril.
One of NSFs strong points is multi-disciplinary integration at the frontier, where
disciplinary boundaries blur and knowledge converges. To explore that territory, our
strategy must be to keep all fields and disciplines of science and engineering
healthy and strong.
Frontier research is NSFs unique task in pursuing the Administrations research
priorities within the larger federal research and development effort. Over the years,
NSF has advanced the frontier with support for pioneering research that has
spawned new concepts and even new disciplines. The NSF budget provides strong
support in fundamental research for activities coordinated by the National Science
and Technology Council (NSTC).

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NSF is the lead federal agency supporting NSTCs Networking and Information
Technology Research and Development (NITRD) program. The 07 budget includes
investments of $904 million in NITRDan increase of $93 million.
A highlight of the Foundations contribution to NITRD is a $35 million investmentan increase of $10 millionin Cyber Trust. Cyber Trust supports cuttingedge research to ensure that computers and networks that underlie national infrastructures, as well as in homes and offices, can be relied on to work even in the
face of cyber attacks. Its part of a larger effort in cyber security research, which
totals $97 million.
NSF is also the lead in the multi-agency National Nanotechnology Initiative
(NNI). NSFs 07 investment in NNI is $373 million, an increase of $29 million. Of
that total, $65 million will fund Nanoscale interdisciplinary research teams (NIRTs).
These awards encourage team approaches to address nanoscale research and education themes, where a collaborative blend of expertise is needed to make significant
contributions.
NSF will invest $205 millionan increase of $8 millionin the interagency Climate Change Science Program. NSF supports a broad portfolio of research activities
that provides a comprehensive scientific foundation for understanding climate and
climate variability. Climate has a pervasive effect on the U.S. through its impact
on natural resources, the economy, and the environment, so this is work of great
significance to the Nation.
NSF investments in basic research in Homeland Security also increase by $42
million to $384 million. An important new effort will support a program of fundamental research on novel technologies for sensors and sensor systems to improve the
detection of explosives, with a particular emphasis on Improvised Explosive Devices
(IEDs).
Fundamental research can play a vital role in helping to stem this threat, and
at the same time, advance the entire field of sensor research. A focal point of this
$20 million activity will be improving the sensitivity and fine resolution of sensors
to recognize threats earlier than current technologies.
The International Polar Year (IPY) in 2007 to 2008 will mark the 50th anniversary of the International Geophysical Year. That was a year in which unparalleled
exploration of Earth and space led to discoveries in many fields of scienceand we
hope to emulate that success. The U.S. vision for IPY, articulated by the National
Academies,1 urges the U.S. scientific community and federal agencies to participate
as international leaders.
The Administration has asked NSF to lead U.S. IPY activities. In 2007, we will
invest $62 million to address major challenges in polar research. Key research programs include: Observing Environmental Change in the Arctic; Studying Ice Sheet
Dynamics and Stability; and Life in the Cold and Dark.
Recent advances in elementary particle physics strongly suggest that we are on
the verge of a revolution in our understanding of the nature of matter, energy,
space, and time. NSF will expand its substantial investment in elementary particle
physics by $15 million. The opportunities for discovery today are greater than at
any point in the last half-century, particularly for the study of dark matter, dark
energy, and the physics of the universe.
A new research effort to address policy-relevant Science Metrics is funded initially
at $6.8 million, through the Social, Behavioral and Economic Sciences Directorate.
The goal is to develop the data, tools, and knowledge needed to establish the foundations for an evidence-based science policy. NSF intends to pursue this in close cooperation with other agencies.
The National Science Foundation has been selected to play major roles in the
Presidents American Competitiveness Initiative (ACI). These include:
Investing in the generation of fundamental discoveries that produce valuable
and marketable technologies;
Providing world-class facilities and infrastructure that are essential to transform research and enable discovery; and
Preparing the Nations scientific, technological, engineering, and mathematics
workforce for the 21st Century while improving the quality of math and
science education in Americas schools.
In pursuit of these ACI goals, NSF will continue to make major contributions to
Americas innovation systems by advancing new scientific and engineering concepts.
These investments are all part of the request in the Presidents Budget to increase
support for research and related activities by 7.7 percent to $4.7 billion. This will
1A

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Vision for the International Polar Year 20072008, National Academies Press.

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enable NSF to support as many as 500 more research grants and provide opportunities for upwards of 6,400 additional scientists, students, post-doctoral fellows and
technicians to contribute to the innovation enterprise.
A hallmark of NSFs approach is to develop the Nations talent pool by integrating
research and education. This longstanding NSF practice facilitates the direct transfer of new knowledge to the private sector. It happens every time graduate students
with experience working at the frontiers of discovery enter the work force. This is
a strong suit in U.S. competitiveness, and it is one of NSFs greatest contributions
to the Nations innovation system.
As a priority within our overarching mandate to prepare the STEM workforce for
the 21st century, NSF will continue to emphasize programs aimed at tapping the
potential of those under-represented in the science and engineering workforceespecially minorities, women, and persons with disabilities. Support for this priority
will total over $640 million in 07.
Three highly successful programs form the core of this investment: the Louis
Stokes Alliances for Minority Participation (LSAMP), the Alliances for Graduate
Education and the Professoriate (AGEP), and the Centers of Research Excellence in
Science and Technology (CREST). These programs increase by $16.2 millionor 24
percent.
Broadening participation also applies to institutions. In 07, we will increase efforts to ensure that the U.S. enjoys a strong capability in science and engineering
across all regions of the country. NSF will invest $100 million in EPSCoR, the Experimental Program to Stimulate Competitive Research.
Providing world-class facilities and infrastructure is our third priority for 2007.
NSF has a long-established role in providing state-of-the-art infrastructure to meet
major research challenges. Our strategy is to invest in tools that promise significant
advances in a field of research and to make them widely available to a broad crosssection of investigators.
Total funding in the Major Research Equipment and Facilities Construction
(MRFEC) account is $240.45 million. This investment funds five on-going projects
and two new starts.
The two new projects are the feature attractions of our major equipment investment in 2007: the Alaska Region Research Vessel (ARRV) and the Ocean Observatories Initiative (OOI). Both projects will help to fulfill the Administrations 2004
U.S. Ocean Action Plan, developed in response to the U.S. Commission on Ocean
Policy.
ARRV is a ship that will dramatically improve access to Arctic waters. With an
operating year as long as 300 days, this ship could accommodate some five hundred
researchers and students annually. A variety of complex regional and global ecosystem and climate studies require a technologically advanced oceanographic platform to conduct field research at the ice edge as well as in ice up to three feet thick.
OOI is an integrated observatory network, distributed among coastal and deepsea sites, that will help advance our understanding of oceanographic and geological
features and processes. With these fundamentally new tools for local, regional and
global ocean science, researchers and students will now have continuous, interactive
access to the ocean.
As our facilities increase in sophistication and capability, so does the amount of
data they produce. The sheer volume of information is overwhelming our current
computational capacity.
Cyberinfrastructure is a key factor in addressing this problemand also in establishing and continuing global research excellence for many years to come. It remains
a significant NSF priority. In 2007, funding for cyberinfrastructure research and development will reach $597 millionan increase of $77 million, or 15 percent.
NSF will invest $50 million to begin the acquisition of a leadership-class high performance computing system. This will be our first step on the road toward computation and data processing and storage, for petascale-level science and engineering. It
will be a major milestone in NSFs multi-year plan to provide and support a worldclass computing and data management environment that will make the most powerful high performance computing assets broadly available to the science and engineering community.
NSFs fourth priority for 07 is perhaps the most compelling: Bolstering K12 Education. Todays youngsters face a world of increasing global competition. We depend
on the excellence of U.S. schools and universities to provide them with the wherewithal to meet this challenge and to make their own contributions to Americas future.
We clearly need to do more to build strong research foundations and foster innovation in K12 science and mathematics education. In line with Administrations
focus on this vital national priority NSF will invest $104 million in a new effort

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named Discovery Research K12 that aims to strengthen K12 science, technology,
engineering, and mathematics education. We will refocus our efforts on a vital cluster of research in three well-defined grand challenges:
Developing more effective science and mathematics assessments for K12;
Improving science teaching and learning in the elementary grades; and
Introducing cutting-edge discoveries into K12 classrooms.
We will also increase funding for the Graduate Teaching Fellowships in K12
Educationbetter known as GK12by nearly 10 percent to $56 million, supporting an estimated 1,000 graduate fellows. By pairing graduate students and K
12 teachers in the classroom, this program has been particularly successful in encouraging effective partnerships between institutions of higher education and local
school districts and in exposing young minds to role models.
Although the Education and Human Resources account increases $19 million, or
2.5 percent over last year, this does not reflect the total investment in education
activities at NSF. After accounting for various base changes, such as a planned $17
million phase down in the Math and Science Partnership program, and contributions from the research account, K12 investments actually increase by over 10 percent and investments in undergraduate education increase by over six percent. The
budget request proposes significant increases in all other Congressionally mandated
programs, such as graduate fellowships and traineeships, research experiences for
undergraduates and teachers, faculty early career development, Robert Noyce scholarships, advanced technology education in two-year colleges, and informal science
education.
Today, I have only mentioned just a few of the FY 2007 investment highlights.
With this first installment of the ten-year commitment to double NSFs budget, we
will be able to capitalize on the many areas of emerging promise already on the horizon.
That means generating quality programs year, after year, after yearand continuing to lead the federal momentum toward more robust business practices as we
put tax dollars to work for the Nation. We are proud of the leadership weve provided through the Presidents Management Agenda. As is highlighted in the budget,
NSF is one of three agencies recognized as models of excellence in Grants Management, and we are committed to upholding that tradition.
The Presidents American Competitiveness Initiative makes clear the larger rationale for investments in science and engineering. This is to put knowledge to
workto improve the quality of life and enhance the security and prosperity of
every citizen. NSF is committed to cultivating a science and engineering enterprise
that not only unlocks the mysteries of the universe but that addresses the challenges of America and the world.
Mr. Chairman, I hope that this brief overview conveys to you NSFs commitment
to advance science and technology in the national interest. I am very aware and appreciative of the Committees long-standing bipartisan support for NSF, and I would
be happy to respond to any questions that you have.
BIOGRAPHY

FOR

ARDEN L. BEMENT, JR.

Arden L. Bement, Jr., became Director of the National Science Foundation on November 24, 2004. He had been Acting Director since February 22, 2004.
He joined NSF from the National Institute of Standards and Technology, where
he had been Director since Dec. 7, 2001. Prior to his appointment as NIST Director,
Bement served as the David A. Ross Distinguished Professor of Nuclear Engineering
and head of the School of Nuclear Engineering at Purdue University. He has held
appointments at Purdue University in the schools of Nuclear Engineering, Materials
Engineering, and Electrical and Computer Engineering, as well as a courtesy appointment in the Krannert School of Management. He was Director of the Midwest
Superconductivity Consortium and the Consortium for the Intelligent Management
of the Electrical Power Grid.
Bement served as a member of the U.S. National Science Board from 1989 to
1995. The board guides NSF activities and also serves as a policy advisory body to
the President and Congress. As NSF Director, Bement will now serve as an ex officio member of the NSB.
He also chaired the Commission for Engineering and Technical Studies and the
National Materials Advisory Board of the National Research Council; was a member
of the Space Station Utilization Advisory Subcommittee and the Commercialization
and Technology Advisory Committee for NASA; and consulted for the Department

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of Energys Argonne National Laboratory and the Idaho National Engineering and
Environmental Laboratory.
Bement joined the Purdue faculty in 1992 after a 39-year career in industry, government, and academia. These positions included: Vice President of Technical Resources and of Science and Technology for TRW Inc. (19801992); Deputy Under
Secretary of Defense for Research and Engineering (19791980); Director, Office of
Materials Science, DARPA (19761979); Professor of Nuclear Materials, MIT (1970
1976); Manager, Fuels and Materials Department and the Metallurgy Research Department, Battelle Northwest Laboratories (19651970); and Senior Research Associate, General Electric Co. (19541965).
He has been a Director of Keithley Instruments Inc. and the Lord Corp. and was
a member of the Science and Technology Advisory Committee for the Howmet Corp.
(a division of ALCOA).
Bement holds an engineer of metallurgy degree from the Colorado School of
Mines, a Masters degree in metallurgical engineering from the University of Idaho,
a doctorate degree in metallurgical engineering from the University of Michigan, an
honorary doctorate degree in engineering from Cleveland State University, and an
honorary doctorate degree in science from Case Western Reserve University. He is
a member of the U.S. National Academy of Engineering.

Chairman BOEHLERT. Thank you very much. Dr. McQueary.


STATEMENT OF DR. CHARLES E. MCQUEARY, UNDER SECRETARY, SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY, DEPARTMENT OF
HOMELAND SECURITY

Dr. MCQUEARY. Thank you, Mr. Chairman, Congressman Gordon, distinguished Members of the Committee. It is a pleasure to
be here with you today to discuss the budget for research and development activities of the Department of Homeland Securitys
Science and Technology Directorate. The House Science Committee
was the first Congressional committee I appeared before following
my confirmation in the spring of 2003, and as I am leaving my post
next month, I expect this to be the last Congressional committee
I will testify before as DHS Under Secretary for Science and Technology, so this hearing today would come full circle.
As this committee and many of the Nations leaders recognize,
advancement in science and technology play a vital role in protecting our country from natural and manmade disasters. Making
such advancements happen and carrying them from their hypothetical beginnings to real-life application is the job of the Science
and Technology Directorate. We are doing this, of course, to get the
critical tools to those who stand between us and disasters.
In the days and weeks that followed Hurricane Katrina, the
Science and Technology Directorate staff provided valuable subject
matter expertise in diverse areas that including emergency responder communications, evacuation logistics, robot-assisted search
and rescue, and hazardous biological material disposal. S&T also
contributed to modeling and simulation analyses of petroleum
shortages and disease impacts, critical infrastructure damage and
economic impact, and of course we all know that there were tremendous difficulties there and that continues to be discussed at
great length within the Congress and our country.
Many of our ongoing efforts focus on improving tools and systems
that will enhance emergency response capability. Some of these include standards to ensure the reliability of equipment and processes, personal protective equipment to help responders function
well in contaminated environments, and a framework for wireless

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inter-operability so the responders can communicate effectively
with one another during an emergency.
Id like to highlight a few of the many accomplishments of the
R&D programs of the past year. S&T collaborated with local partners to implement second generation enhancements to BioWatch, a
bioaerosol monitoring system operating in more than 30 U.S. urban
areas. We have significantly increased the number of air collectors
in the top threat cities, extending protection to more people while
fortifying our coverage of transit systems and special events. We
also commenced operation of the National Bioforensics Analysis
Center, the Nations leading resource for the analysis of forensic
samples to identify perpetrators of biological attacks. We
transitioned the PROTECT chemical detection system for public facilities to the New York City Metro Transit Authority, and PROTECT is now operating in subway systems in New York City,
Washington, D.C. and Boston.
In the explosives area, S&T collaborated with the Office of Domestic Preparedness, which is now called the Office of Grants and
Training, on preliminary testing of blast-resistant trash receptacles. We are using the test results to write the first national
standard for this technology. S&Ts Border Watch Program is advancing our border surveillance and monitoring capabilities and
supporting border patrol agents in remote locations. Were developing a wireless communications framework that equips field
agents with sophisticated tools that enable them to quickly determine if people crossing the border illegally present a criminal or
terrorist threat to the United States.
On the cyber front, and I know thats an area you have a great
personal interest, as does the Committee, on the cyber front, we established the Cyber Security Testbed Program to explore threats to
network security without compromising the Internet. Just as you
need a secure biocontainment facility to handle live viruses, you
need a secure cyber containment facility to work with computer viruses, and this is what the testbed provides, and I also should say
that this work was done jointly with NSF. S&T is now participating in the Interagency Networking and Information Technology
R&D Program to help ensure that the departments cyber security
and critical infrastructure R&D activities are coordinated with
those of other federal agencies.
Manufacturers and sellers who can produce and distribute effective anti-terrorism technologies require certain protections to encourage the development of countermeasures that are critical in the
fight against terrorism. Towards this end, we have certified or designated some 57 technologies as qualified anti-terrorism technologies, making them eligible for the Safety Act protections, and
we are on schedule in reviewing all applications that have been
submitted to date. A far more extensive summary of the accomplishments are in the written testimony for the record and you can
read that at your leisure.
Let me just briefly mention the 2007 plan and then Ill wrap up.
We do support the departments goals and objectives through strategic RDT&E investments that weigh the risks facing the Nation
and the estimated cost and benefits and solutionsfor fiscal year
2007, the S&T Directorate proposes a budget of approximately $1

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billion and 383 full-time equivalent employees. And this year we
now have the M&A account properly accounted for and it will be
much more visible to the Congress and others as to how that
money is being spent, and thats been discussed with with your
staff people, I believe, so that theres an understanding there.
Finally, the requested R&D and acquisition operations appropriations which were requesting is $806 million. And I think, sir, with
that, I will wrap up my comments and thank you for the opportunity for appearing before you and I look forward to trying to answer the questions you have.
[The prepared statement of Dr. McQueary follows:]
PREPARED STATEMENT

OF

CHARLES E. MCQUEARY

INTRODUCTION
Good morning Chairman Boehlert, Congressman Gordon, and distinguished Members of the Committee. It is a pleasure to be with you today to discuss the research
and development activities of the Department of Homeland Securitys (DHS) Science
and Technology (S&T) Directorate.
As this committee and many of our nations leaders recognize, advancements in
science and technology play a vital role in protecting our nation from natural and
man-made disasters. Making such advancements happencarrying them from their
hypothetical beginnings to real-life applicationsis the job of the S&T Directorate.
We are committed to developing cutting-edge tools and systems that will enable
the dedicated men and women who protect and secure our homeland to serve more
effectively and efficiently. Providing these end-users at all levels of government with
the technological capabilities they need, regardless of the type of threat, is our most
important mission.
For example, in the days and weeks that followed Katrina, S&T Directorate staff
provided valuable subject matter expertise in diverse areas, including emergency responder communications, evacuation logistics, robot-assisted search and rescue, appropriate technology applications, hazardous biological materials disposal, and site
preparation, and rapid deployment of mobile and modular shelters. Our staff also
contributed modeling and simulation analysis in areas that include petroleum shortages, disease impacts, critical infrastructure damage, and economic impact. In addition, a number of staff members worked as volunteers, supporting Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) in the relief effort.
Many of our ongoing efforts are improving tools and systems that will enhance
emergency response capabilities. We are developing standards for emergency response to ensure the reliability of equipment and processes; developing personal protective equipment for emergency responders when operating in hazardous chemical,
biological or nuclear environments; and developing inter-operable systems to keep
the lines of communication open and clear during a disaster. In addition, the S&T
Directorate made significant organizational strides:
With the transfer of the Transportation Security Laboratory into the S&T Directorate, we completed the plan to consolidate existing research, development, testing and evaluation (RDT&E) within DHS. Given our principal responsibility of coordinating and organizing research and development (R&D)
activities throughout the Department, I consider this a major accomplishment
that will enable the Department to maximize its science and technology resources.
The S&T Directorate also made internal management changes that will enable us to productively focus our efforts and work more efficiently. Last year,
we established the position of the Chief Financial Officer to oversee finance,
budget, planning, and program analysis and evaluation. We also established
the position of Director of Plans, Programs and Requirements to coordinate
the direction and activities of the S&T Portfolios. I will describe these Portfolios further when I discuss the organization of the S&T Directorate.
As a three-year-old organization, I am very proud of the great progress the
S&T Directorate has made on creating a Strategic Plan that will solidify our
five to ten-year-vision for RDT&E. An accompanying performance management system now in development will enable us to establish highly effective,
adaptable business operating policies and procedures that will position the or-

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ganization to meet the current and future needs of our nation, regardless of
the threats we face.
SHORT- AND LONG-TERM RESEARCH
At the S&T Directorate, we know we must also push qualified technologies out
of the development pipeline faster and deploy them in actual operating environments so that we are better prepared the next time we are put to the test. To that
end, the Directorate has focused its efforts on near-term development and deployment of technologies. However, as part of the Nations science and technology complex, we recognize the importance of a sustained effort to expand our knowledge and
resource base for the future.
Our investments are diversified not only in terms of challenges and opportunities,
but also in terms of technological maturity as well. Some scientific problems are
basicwe must achieve a core understanding of some phenomena. Others are problems of applicationwe must learn how to apply our knowledge and understanding
of an issue or problem to our own mission. Finally, other technological problems involve engineering developmentwe must investigate and determine how to move
applied knowledge from the laboratory bench to the user. The Department invests
in all three. We conduct and sponsor basic and applied research as well as advanced
technology development.
Basic research is sponsored in the expectation that its results will eventually
give us new and better ways of accomplishing our mission. For example, understanding terrorist motivations and being able to predict intent; or improving our fundamental knowledge of the properties of non-traditional chemical
agents.
Applied research takes what we already know how to do, and forms it into
a useful homeland security application. Integration of biometric data into
identification documents and devices used to secure shipping containers during transit are examples of this type of activity.
Advanced technology development leads to the invention of new devices and
systems that can ultimately be transitioned to end-users. Our new handheld
scanners for chemical countermeasures are a good example of this.
These three kinds of work have very different timetables. Basic research has the
longestit may take a decade or more before a fundamental discovery results in a
technology deployed in the field. Applied research tends to progress in months and
years. Developmental research is closest to the userhere we work to take advantage of identified opportunities to rapidly develop technologies and deliver them to
end-users.
In fiscal year (FY) 2005 approximately two percent of our funding went to basic
research, 79 percent to applied research, and 19 percent to developmental researchvery similar to our FY 2004 funding distributions. I expect the distribution
in FY 2006 and FY 2007 to be similar. In addition, it is important to note that the
S&T Directorate has established an improved method for tracking these types of obligations, which will improve the accuracy of these estimates in the future.
FY 2005 ACCOMPLISHMENTS
I am pleased to report to you the progress we have made in just three years.
Much of the work the S&T Directorate carries out requires years of scientific pursuit before it comes to fruition. However, we are beginning to see knowledge and
technology emerge that will provide the foundation for strong and resilient homeland security for the Nation.
I would like to highlight in more detail the accomplishments in our research and
development programs over the past year.
Regarding our efforts to develop and implement chemical, biological, and
explosive countermeasures, we:
Initiated deployment of BioWatch Enhancement (Generation 2) in more than
30 U.S. urban areas, in collaboration with local partners This enhancement
places significantly more air collectors in the top threat cities (including collectors that cover transit systems and special events), allowing them to further increase their broad population protection while also providing targeted
coverage of their most vulnerable venues.
Conducted detailed technical material threat assessments on six agents. This
work is done in direct support for the procurement of countermeasures under
the DHS/HHS BioShield program.

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Began operating the National Bioforensics Analysis Center (NBFAC) as the
Nations lead facility for technical analysis of forensic samples in order to support attribution, or identify perpetrators, of biological attacks.
Approved a record of decision on the Environmental Impact Statement (EIS),
awarded an architect-engineer design contract, and awarded a contract for
construction management services for the National Biodefense Analysis and
Countermeasures Center (NBACC).
Completed and provided the FY 2006 Bioterrorism Risk Analysis to the Administration. This risk assessment, mandated by Homeland Security Presidential Directive (HSPD)10, is targeted to inform national plans and priorities for biodefense investments and will be a helpful tool to guide DHS policy-makers regarding the Departments efforts to anticipate, prevent and respond to acts of bioterrorism.
Conducted an Interagency exercise to study an incident involving persistent
highly toxic chemical agent release.
Transitioned the Program for Response Options and Technology Enhancements for Chemical Terrorism (PROTECT) networked chemical detection system to the New York City Metro Transit Authority. PROTECT is a chemical
detection and response system that was designed for public facilities. It was
first installed in the Washington, D.C. metro transit system, and is now operating in the New York and Boston subway systems as well.
Began establishing the Explosives Knowledge Center, which will enable
State, local, and tribal communities to assess the risks of explosive attack and
the costs of countermeasures.
Drafted the first-ever performance standard for a point chemical agent vapor
detector for use by civilian responders which is being vetted through the
standards organization, ASTM International.
Developed standards for calibration and optimization of performance for
hand-held, trace-explosive detectors.
Within the areas of support to the Departments components, we:
Conducted an exercise with Customs and Border Protection (CBP) under the
Northern Border Security Initiative that identified capability gaps and the
technologies needed to address them. The exercise identified what technologies both Canada and the United States agree will improve border security capabilities. The S&T Directorate will use these outcomes to help focus
and maximize the development of border security technologies. A report to
Congress was delivered in January 2006 on this issue. This effort was in support of CBP.
Conducted end-to-end testing of the Border and Transportation Security Network (BTSNet) wireless communications backbone installed at the U.S. Border Patrol Station in Douglas, Arizona. The testing focused on the transfer
of data from handheld and vehicle-mounted mobile computers to the border
patrol station via an existing tower infrastructure. This effort was in support
of CBP.
Designed, built, and tested through the Maritime Automated Scene Understanding (ASU) project, a system that fuses RADAR, camera, and Automatic
Identification System (AIS) data, and alerts watchstanders to anomalies in
the coastal environment. This effort was in support of the U.S. Coast Guard.
Completed Phase I design of the Advanced Container Security Device (ACSD).
The ACSD is a security device being designed to monitor and communicate
security breaches from each of the six sides of a container, as well as detect
human presence inside containers. This effort was in support of CBP.
Developed the Supply Chain Security Architecture (SCSA) that gives DHS the
capability to bridge data and information between container security devices
and the National Targeting Center. This effort was in support of CBP.
Brought the Interagency Modeling and Atmospheric Analysis Center (IMAAC)
to full operational capability. IMAAC integrates the Nations best modeling
capabilities to provide accurate information to predict the movement and
spread of the contaminate cloud in the event of a major disaster or terrorist
attack, thereby saving lives and assisting with timely response decisions. This
effort is in support of federal, State, and local response organizations through
the Homeland Security Operations Center (HSOC), serving as the dissemination point for the Department.

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Established the Training Exercise and Lessons Learned program to support
continuous improvement of our nations preparedness to respond to catastrophic events, as called for in HSPD8, National Preparedness. This effort
is in support of federal, State, and local response organizations through the
Office of Grants and Training.
Developed in partnership with the U.S. Coast Guard, the U.S. Navy and others, a low cost commercial anti-swimmer system to protect high value assets
from underwater attack. This effort was in support of U.S. Coast Guard.
Tested non-intrusive technologies to quickly inspect shipboard spaces, to locate or inspect hidden compartments for contraband, and technologies to communicate with boarding team members. This effort was in support of U.S.
Coast Guard.
Began support of three efforts to enhance personal protection for U.S. Secret
Service personnel: Escape Mask, Handheld Suicide Bomber Detector, and
Portable Entry Point Screening Portal for Explosive Detection. This effort was
in support of the U.S. Secret Service.
Within the areas of critical infrastructure protection and cyber security,
we:
Established the Cyber Security R&D Center, the S&T Directorates primary
interface with the academic and industrial cyber security research communities.
Established the Infrastructure Security Program, the goal of which is to develop more secure and robust mechanisms that will enable the Internet to
support the Nations needs now and in the future.
Established the Cyber Security Testbed Program, which enables a wide community of researchers to explore threats to network security without risk of
compromising the actual Internet.
Completed development of software algorithms in coordination with the Electric Power Research Institute for a fast-running modeling and simulation prototype for use in preventing cascading blackouts.
Published two reports that identified technology aids that significantly close
existing operational gaps, to increase the accuracy and reduce the time and
cost for personnel background investigations for private security guards and
insiders in sensitive positions.
Issued the first annual National Critical Infrastructure Protection R&D Plan
that addressed R&D priorities in the areas of protection and prevention, sensors and detectors, insider threats, social and behavioral issues, and future
needs.
Initiated 11 new projects (bringing our total number of those underway to 22)
including rapid prototyping at the Kentucky Critical Infrastructure Protection
Institute to support the Departments ability to protect community-based infrastructure.
Within the emerging threats and rapid prototyping areas of the S&T Directorate, we:
Evaluated the compounded infrastructure threat by investigating ways in
which infrastructure (i.e., planes into buildings, nuclear plants, chemical
plants) could be used as a weapon. The effort was used to discover and identify those infrastructures not previously viewed as concerns.
Initiated the Rapid Technology Application Program (RTAP) to expeditiously
provide needed new technologies to federal, State and local components of the
homeland security mission. End-users have generated 28 urgent rapid prototyping requirements including the need for specialized personal protective
equipment, rapid biological screening tools, portable explosive trace detectors,
and systems to immediately locate emergency responders in the field.
Within other areas of the S&T Directorate, we:
Established the National Science and Technology Threat Awareness and
Reachback (NSSTAR) system to provide real time, technical analysis and support to the homeland security community for anticipating, preventing, and responding to chemical, biological, radiological, nuclear, and high explosive
(CBRNE) threats.
Established an Institute for Discrete Sciences (IDS) to investigate and develop
the specialized computing algorithms and hardware architectures necessary

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to analyze massive amounts of diverse data from multiple, disparate, distributed data sources and to model terrorist attacks and simulate consequences
on a real-time, high-resolution basis.
Completed an engineering design for the Enhanced International Travel Security (EITS) system, which allows the validity of travel documents and the
identity of travelers to be determined in real time at U.S. borders and other
points of entry.
Created the Interagency Center for Applied Homeland Security Technology
(ICAHST) to enable collaboration among intelligence and law enforcement
community agencies on the testing, evaluation, and prototyping of information analysis and sharing technologies.
Established Regional Communications Inter-operability Pilot (RCIP) projects
in Nevada and Kentucky. These pilots focused on developing models for improved communications and inter-operability to address challenges faced nationwide.
Established two additional DHS Centers of Excellence at national universities: the National Center for the Study of Terrorism and Responses to Terrorism, and the Center for the Study of High Consequence Event Preparedness and Response. This brings the total number of such university based national centers to five.
Supported approximately 300 undergraduate and graduate students in DHS
mission-relevant fields through the Scholars and Fellows Program, as well as
funded postdoctoral scientists and engineers to perform advanced research in
areas of critical importance to DHS.
Integrated two competing Counter-Man Portable Air Defense System
(MANPADS) prototypes with planned airframes and performed on-board
ground and flight testing to verify system performance and continued air worthiness of the aircraft with the countermeasure system installed.
Updated SAFECOMs coordinated grant guidance that outlines eligibility requirements, the purposes for which grants may be used, and the guidelines
for implementing a wireless communication system. SAFECOM is a communications program that provides RDT&E, guidance, tools, and templates on
communications-related issues to local, State, and federal public safety agencies.
Prepared the survey tools for the Interoperability Baseline Study, which will
provide a quantitative National assessment of public safety communications
inter-operability.
Prepared a revised application kit for the Support Anti-terrorism by Fostering
Effective Technologies Act of 2002, known as the SAFETY Act, that is easier
to use and understand, with examples to assist applicants.
Processed more than 260 pre-applications and 134 unique technology applications under the SAFETY Act. As of Jan. 5, 2006, we granted Designation and
Certification to 41 qualified anti-terrorism technologies. An additional 16
technologies have been granted designation only status.

FY 2006 ACTIVITIES
As the S&T Directorate matures, we have continued to re-evaluate and reassess
our priorities to better facilitate capabilities needed by the Department and other
customers to make information and analysis sharing possible, to protect the Nations borders and critical infrastructure, and to ensure that technical and operational solutions enable federal, State, and local emergency personnel to anticipate,
respond to, and recover from attacks on the United States. Just as the Nations
science and technology capabilities have helped us defeat enemies overseas in the
past, so too will they help the Nation defeat future efforts of terrorists to successfully attack and disrupt the American way of life. To prepare the Nation to counter
threats from weapons of mass destruction as well as natural disasters, the FY 2006
budget request included increase for initiatives that supported R&D to mitigate
these weapons and their potentially devastating effects as well as efforts aimed at
leveraging technology to produce rapid advances in capabilities to enable DHS personnel to protect the homeland more efficiently and effectively across many components.
Our major ongoing FY 2006 initiatives are aimed at mission-critical areas
and problem sets. Some highlights include:

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National Bio and Agrodefense Facility (NBAF)The proposed NBAF is
envisioned to provide the Nation with the first integrated agricultural,
zoonotic disease, and public health RDT&E facility with the capability to address threats from human pathogens, high-consequence zoonotic disease
agents, and foreign animal diseases. This supports the complementary missions of DHS, the Department of Human Health and Services (HHS) and the
United States Department of Agriculture (USDA). NBAF will provide new
RDT&E infrastructure that will allow for research to enhance agricultural
and public health. This capability is needed to fill a critical gap in the Nations agro and biodefense plan. The NBAF would enhance the national biodefense complex by modernizing and integrating agriculture biocontainment
laboratories for foreign animal disease, human pathogens, and zoonotic diseases through Biosafety Level (BSL) 3 Agricultural and BSL 4 laboratory
spaces. It will also provide the additional infrastructure required for threat
and vulnerability assessments and for testing and evaluating promising foreign animal disease countermeasures. Development of an integrated, national
bio and agrodefense strategy has revealed that the current capabilities are inadequate to meet future research requirements supporting both agricultural
and public health national security. Foreign animal disease studies, public
health threats from emerging, high-consequence zoonotic pathogens, and the
need for development and licensure of medical countermeasures, are generating additional demands for biocontainment laboratory space. Current laboratory space available in the United States is not sufficient to support the
increasing levels of research, development, and testing needed to meet the
growing concerns about accidental or intentional introduction of foreign animal diseases into this country. DHS issued an Expression of Interest (EOI)
on January 19, 2006, to solicit interest for potential sites for the NBAF facility. The EOI will solicit input from organizations or consortia of federal agencies, State and local governments, industry, and academic institutions. In addition to the EOI, the S&T Directorate plans to release a request-for-proposals in February 2006 to procure architect-engineer services to conduct conceptual design studies for the NBAF.
Low Volatility Agent Warning SystemDevelop the Low Volatility Agent
(LVA) Warning System to serve as the basis for a warning and identification
capability against a set of chemical threat agents whose vapor pressure is sufficiently low that detection by conventional approaches is exceptionally difficult. This set of low volatility agents includes some of the most toxic materials currently known. The Chemical Countermeasures Portfolio has initiated
an effort to develop a transportable capability for the detection of these materials in a response and recovery modethe LVA Surface Contamination Monitor. The FY 2006 funding is being used to develop a protection-mode capability to detect these materials upon release in specific environments. This detect-to-warn system will alert the response system of the imminent hazard
thereby enabling protection of potential victims from exposure and permitting
application of prompt medical countermeasures to minimize or eliminate casualties. This system will be a network of detectors to provide a protect-towarn capability for specific venues, such as high-value buildings and transit
systems. The LVA Warning System will both detect and identify the agent
to ensure correct medical countermeasures are engaged.
Counter-MANPADSBased on the Phase II results in FY 2006, the
Counter-MANPADS Program will initiate Phase III to conduct operational
test and evaluation on Counter-MANPADS advanced prototype equipment installed on commercial aircraft operated by U.S. cargo carriers. The primary
objective is to reduce the residual risk of operations in the commercial environment and lower the cost of ownership. To maintain competition between
two different approaches to design and integration, the Counter-MANPADS
Program will maintain two contractors in Phase III. In FY 2006, each contractor will update its designs to incorporate enhancements for reliability improvements, technology protection, and emergency ground notification. Operational testing and evaluation will be performed on multiple aircraft types to
capture true operations and maintenance costs, as well as technical performance and reliability data. In FY 2006, eight operational test aircraft will be
modified and nine Counter-MANPADS systems will be procured to support
reliability developments, test data collection, and critical technology protection measures. Additionally, live fire test evaluations will provide insight into
the overall effectiveness of the system installed on commercial aircraft. Finally, Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) certification will be completed

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for additional relevant aircraft types, models and series not addressed in
Phase II.
Research and Development ConsolidationThe consolidation of the Departments R&D efforts will continue to be an ongoing priority for the S&T
Directorate. We will continue working with the Transportation Security Administration, CBP and others to solidify integration of their RDT&E activities
into the S&T Directorate. This consolidation is bringing the scientific and engineering personnel and other RDT&E resources of the Department under a
single accountable authority.
FY 2007 PLAN
In FY 2007, the S&T Directorate will maintain ongoing activities in science and
technology research to detect and counter threats and attacks; protect the Nations
critical infrastructure, both physical and cyber; analyze and assess threats and
vulnerabilities; and provide cutting edge technologies to operational end-users. We
will support the Departments strategic goals and objectives by performing RDT&E
while addressing the following criteria:
Risks facing the Nation that are identified and weighed by the S&T Directorate and others, including DHSs Office of Intelligence Analysis;
Homeland security needs that are identified through a systematic science and
technology needs identification process that the S&T Directorate conducts
with its partners;
Estimated costs, benefits, implementability, and potential effectiveness of results of science and technology research and programs; and
DHSs overall priorities, since the S&T Directorate supports and enables
DHSs overall homeland security efforts.
To accomplish these goals, the S&T Directorate proposes a total budget of $1.0
billion and 383 full-time equivalent employees (FTEs). The Management and Administration request is for $195.9 million and provides the resources for the salaries and benefits of the S&T Directorates employees in support of our homeland security R&D programs. The request for the Research, Development, Acquisition and
Operations appropriation is $806.4 million.
The FY 2007 Presidents budget for the S&T Directorate provides the Department
with the resources necessary to continue and advance our efforts to develop and deploy the technologies required to enhance the security of the homeland in the 21st
century.
Program increases proposed in the FY 2007 Presidents budget include:
$7.1 million is requested for the Cyber Security program to enhance efforts
in the areas of Domain Name Infrastructure, Secure Protocols for Routing Infrastructure, Cyber Security Testbed development, Large-scale Network
Datasets, and Highly Scalable Identity Management.
$2.0 million is requested to establish a Joint Agro-Terror Defense Office
(JADO). The Departments agrodefense responsibilities are defined in several
public laws and Homeland Security Presidential Directives, including: the
Homeland Security Act of 2002; Critical Infrastructure Identification,
Prioritization, and Protection (HSPD7); Defense of United States Agriculture
and Food (HSPD9); and Bio-defense of the 21st Century (HSPD10). The
JADO will be led by an executive director who will lead an interagency staff.
The JADO will be responsible for coordinating development and deployment
of the integrated government-wide agro-defense programs called for by these
directives and law.
$1.0 million to comply with the requirements of Public Law 108330, the
DHS Financial Accountability Act which requires the annual Performance
and Accountability Report to include an assurance by the Secretary of the
adequacy of financial reporting controls. These funds are a critical component
of the Departments efforts to prevent waste, fraud and abuse and enhance
its financial accountability.
In addition, the FY 2007 S&T Directorate budget proposes the realignment of approximately $110.0 million from the S&T Directorates Research and Development
appropriation account to the Management and Administration appropriation account. This realignment of funds is proposed to more accurately reflect the fact that
in the past, these funds have been used to support the direct and indirect management, administration, and oversight costs associated with the Departments science

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and technology enterprise. Furthermore, it will provide the Congress and other interested parties with a more transparent view into the S&T Directorates operations, the distribution of planned and actual expenditures between research and
development activities, and the direct and indirect costs associated with their delivery.
RDT&E PROCESS
As I stated one year ago, the S&T Directorate developed an RDT&E process to
provide a clearly defined, replicable method for assessing needs and risk, planning,
allocating resources and executing programs to produce high-impact, cost-effective
and critically needed homeland security technology solutions. We are in the process
of streamlining this process to address our programmatic needs. We will use this
process to carry out risk-based planning.
SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY DIRECTORATE ORGANIZATION
The S&T Directorate is the research and development component of the Department of Homeland Security. The S&T Directorate organizes the vast scientific and
technological resources of the United States to prevent or mitigate the effects of catastrophic terrorism against us or our allies. It unifies and coordinates much of the
Federal Governments efforts to develop and implement scientific and technological
countermeasures to terrorist threats. The S&T Directorate is a technically robust,
agile, and responsive organization capable of meeting all of its current and future
roles and responsibilities in the Department. The four elements of the S&T Directorate are:
Office of Plans, Programs, and Requirements (PPR);
Homeland Security Advanced Research Projects Agency (HSARPA);
Office of Research and Development (ORD); and
Office of Systems Engineering and Development (SED).
The S&T Directorate implements its science and technology activities through focused portfolios (organizationally within PPR) that address biological, chemical and
explosive threats; support the research and development needs of the operational
components of the Department; support federal, State, local and tribal preparedness
and infrastructure protection; and cross-cut areas such as standards, threat awareness, and inter-operability that impact all aspects of the S&T Directorates RDT&E
process. These portfolios cut across the four elements of the S&T Directorate and
integrate the innovative input from private industry and academia as well as national and federal laboratories. In particular, PPR provides the requirements and
technical vision for the S&T Directorate and its RDT&E process. HSARPA has an
essential role in meeting the goals and objectives of the Department and the S&T
Directorate, through research and development, and technology maturation in industry and academia. ORD executes the S&T Directorates RDT&E programs within
the national and federal laboratories; establishes the University Centers of Excellence; and maintains the Nations enduring research and development complex dedicated to homeland security. SED oversees the transition of large-scale and pilot systems to the field through program offices, which bring mature technologies from the
laboratory to the user through a rapid, efficient, and disciplined project management process. In addition, the S&T Directorate houses the Office of Weapons of
Mass Destruction Operations and Incident Management to offer scientific advice
and support to meet operational needs. Through this office, the S&T Directorate exercises its scientific and technical leadership role under the National Response Plan.
Portfolios
Biological Countermeasures
The Biological Countermeasures Portfolio provides the understanding, technologies, and systems needed to anticipate, deter, protect against, detect, mitigate,
and recover from biological attacks on this nations population, agriculture or infrastructure. Biological threats can take many forms and be distributed in many ways,
and we take an integrated systems approach to countering them. Our principal
areas of interest include: vulnerability and risk analysis to identify the need for vaccines, therapeutics, and diagnostics; development and implementation of early detection and warning systems to characterize an attack and permit early prophylaxis
and decontamination; and development of a national bioforensic analysis capability
to support attribution of biological agent use. Simulation, modeling, and gaming
form an important part of this effort. They help guide and prioritize technical developments, and they are invaluable in training decision makers before and during an
event. The Directorates partners include the Department of Health and Human

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Services (HHS), the Department of Defense (DOD), the Department of Agriculture
(USDA), the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), the Department of Justice
(DOJ), the Department of State (DOS), the United States Postal Service (USPS),
and State and local operational end-users.
Chemical Countermeasures
The Chemical Countermeasures Portfolio enhances the Nations capability to anticipate, prevent, protect from, respond to, and recover from chemical threat attacks
through interagency leadership and innovative research, development, and technology transition.
Our objectives are to enable comprehensive understanding and analyses of chemical threats in the domestic domain; to develop pre-event assessment, discovery, and
interdiction capabilities for chemical threats; to develop capability for warning, notification, and timely analysis of chemical attack; to optimize technology and process
for recovery from chemical attacks; and to enhance the capability to identify chemical attack sources. Our work reflects our recognition of the need to prepare against
a range of threats-classical chemical warfare agents (CWA), toxic industrial chemicals (TICs), and non-traditional agents (NTAs). Coordination with other agencies
like the EPA, HHS, the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), DOD, the interagency Technical Support Working Group (TSWG), and the Intelligence Community
(IC) remains critical to support our national chemical preparedness goals. The DOD
has developed a particularly strong chemical defense program over a number of decades, and is a key partner for moving new capabilities into the domain of homeland
security.
Explosives Countermeasures
The Explosives Countermeasures Portfolio develops and coordinates technical capabilities to detect, interdict, and mitigate the consequences of the use of improvised
explosives devices (IEDs) in terrorist attacks against U.S. citizens and critical infrastructure. RDT&E activities include prioritization of efforts among the many possible terrorist threats and targets, development of new detection technologies, and
evaluation of integrated protective systems for high-value facilities. Our priorities
focus on the detection of vehicle bombs, suicide bombers, and leave-behind bombs.
As a result of the R&D consolidation in FY 2006, the Explosives Countermeasures
Portfolio will also dedicate significant resources to continue the development of explosives detection and blast mitigation systems for civil aviation security. Consistent
with this RDT&E leadership role, the Explosives Knowledge Center initiated in FY
2005, will provide guidance and information to ensure that preparedness capabilities at the federal, State, local, and tribal levels are updated over time to be consistent with new and emerging technologies and capabilities as well as with the
changing and emerging threats.
Threat Awareness
Formerly known as the Threat and Vulnerability, Testing and Assessment Portfolio, the RDT&E activities funded through the Threat Awareness Portfolio primarily support two DHS strategic goals: awareness and prevention. These activities
provide the tools and knowledge necessary to meet one of the Secretarys recently
announced imperatives to increase preparedness, with particular emphasis on catastrophic events caused by weapons of mass effect, and the requirements delineated
in the Departments National Preparedness Goal. Our efforts in this area focus on
developing information about the two basic elements of terrorist threatterrorist
capabilties on the one hand, and terrorist motivations and intent on the otherand
on providing the advanced information processing tools necessary to rapidly and accurately discover, use, and share such information. Such tools and methods are intended to enable and enhance federal, State, and local awareness of a broad range
of threats through information fusion and information sharing.
Standards Portfolio
The development, adoption and implementation of standardsproviding the basis
for ensuring the effectiveness of scientific and technological toolsare critically important for homeland security. Measures of effectiveness for any critical technology
or tool include basic function, appropriateness and adequacy for the task, inter-operability, efficiency and sustainability. With the mission to develop and coordinate the
adoption of national standards and appropriate evaluation methods to meet homeland security needs, the Standards Portfolio cuts across all aspects of the S&T Directorates mission. Homeland Security standards address metrics for products,
services, and guidelines, performance specifications, testing and evaluation protocols, training, certification of equipment and personnel, as well as metrics and quality assurance for deployment of systems. Standards are also an essential component

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of codes of practice and standard operating procedures. These standards will provide
DHS the ability to provide guidance to federal, State, local, and tribal homeland security entities regarding purchase, deployment, and use of these tools.
Cyber Security
Our Cyber Security R&D investments will yield technologies that improve the security of information and information systems in two complementary ways: through
the development of a new generation of cyber security technologies to increase the
security of information and information systems, and through the development of
tools and methodologies to develop more inherently secure systems. The portfolio
also fosters technology transfer and diffusion of federally funded R&D into commercial products and services for private sector applications. This technology diffusion
will result in broad-based benefits to the Information Technology (IT) sector and to
users of IT among the other critical infrastructure sectors. We coordinate with other
federal agencies through the National Science and Technology Councils (NSTC)
Cyber Security and Information Assurance (CSIA) Interagency Working Group [cochaired by DHS and the Office of Science and Technology Policy (OSTP)], and the
InfoSec (Information Security) Research Council. We also collaborate informally
with other agencies that share interests in the area of cyber security R&D, including the National Science Foundation (NSF), various organizations within DOD, and
the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST). We actively pursue opportunities to catalyze additional private sector activity. Such opportunities include
public-private partnerships as well as increased cooperation and communication
among private sector companies and organizations. Finally, we participate in international efforts to develop common areas of collaboration in cyber security R&D.
Critical Infrastructure Protection
The Critical Infrastructure Protection (CIP) R&D Portfolio effort protects the Nations critical infrastructure and key assets from acts of terrorism, natural disasters,
and other emergencies by developing and deploying tools to anticipate, identify, and
analyze risks, and systems to reduce those risks and the consequences of an event.
Funded RDT&E and required coordination efforts in this portfolio have been categorized into four programs: Modeling, Simulation, and Analysis; Protective Security
Technologies; the Kentucky Critical Infrastructure Protection Laboratory
(KyCIPLab); and development of the annual National CIP R&D Plan, as required
by HSPD7, Critical Infrastructure Identification, Prioritization, and Protection.
Emergent and Prototypical Technology
Our Emergent and Prototypical Technology Portfolio combines two formerly distinct effortsEmerging Threats and Rapid Prototyping. The mission of the Emergent and Prototypical Technology Portfolio is to: address the dynamic nature of terrorist threats, as science and technology advancements enable new agents of harm
and new ways to employ them; and accelerate, through rapid prototyping, the deployment of advanced technologies to address urgent user requirements. The Emergent Threat Program will anticipate and define potential threats arising from new
scientific and technological advances or from terrorists using existing technologies
in new or unexpected ways, and will jump-start countermeasures capabilities development. Innovative, crosscutting approaches to anticipating and responding to new
and emerging threats will permit us to develop capabilities to thwart them before
they are used. This Portfolio uses a four-phased process of Discovery, Analysis,
Tests, and Potential Solution.
Since relevant R&D is underway at other agencies and organizations, partnerships with DOE, DOD, HHS, DOJ, USDA, and the Intelligence Community offer
great benefits.
Supporting the DHS Components
We have programs dedicated to supporting four specific components within DHS:
Border and Transportation, Preparedness and Response, the United States Coast
Guard, and the United States Secret Service. I will address each of these below.
Border and Transportation
The Border and Transportation (B&T) Portfolio (formerly Border and Transportation Security Portfolio) develops and transitions capabilities that improve the security of our nations borders and transportation systems without impeding the flow
of commerce and travel. One of the Departments first priorities is to prevent the
entry of terrorists and the instruments of terrorism into the United States while simultaneously ensuring the efficient flow of lawful traffic and commerce. Our Border
and Transportation S&T Plan and Roadmap represents the combined work of the
S&T Directorate and border and transportation agencies to identify new capabilities

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needed and to plan how the Department will make technology investments in support of B&T mission objectives.
Preparedness and Response
The S&T Directorates Preparedness and Response Portfolio (formerly Emergency
Preparedness and Response) supports the Departments new Preparedness Directorate and FEMA, whose mission is to improve the ability of the Nation to prepare
for, respond to, and recover from catastrophic emergencies both natural and manmade through development and deployment of enabling capabilities. We emphasize
large-scale complex events, especially those involving terrorism. Our research areas
include incident management, decision support, response and recovery, and technology integration. Our most important customers are State and local emergency responders, emergency managers, and the public they serve. The emergency response
community consists of more than 49,000 separate agencies spread throughout the
country. Of approximately 18,000 law enforcement agencies, the overwhelming majority have 24 or fewer sworn officers. Over 85 percent of our nations firefighters
are volunteers. Enhancing the capabilities of such a vast and diverse community,
especially against terrorist threats, requires a rigorous and systematic approach to
the development and transition of a broad range of technology solutions. Our work
is dedicated to applying the best available science and technology for the safety and
security our emergency responders and homeland security professionals so that they
can effectively and efficiently perform their jobssaving lives and restoring critical
services.
United States Coast Guard
The United States Coast Guard protects the public, the environment, and U.S.
economic interests in the Nations ports and waterways, along the coast, on international waters, or in any maritime region as required to support national security.
The Coast Guard research program supports this mission through the development
of technologies and systems to enhance Maritime Domain Awareness (MDA), and
to improve Operational Presence and Response. MDA includes all systems, sensors,
and command and control systems necessary to detect, identify, and determine the
threat potential of all vessel traffic. It also includes Port Security to protect important harbors. Operational Presence and Response involves safely and effectively
stopping a vessel, boarding it, and finding or eliminating any threat or contraband.
Research and development in this program aims to give the Coast Guard the means
of neutralizing threats as far away from potential targets as possible, and of responding to emergencies as quickly and effectively as possible. Coast Guard R&D
is characterized by its many partnerships with other federal agencies and international groups to share costs and expedite delivery of important products. This program also supports such unique and traditional Coast Guard missions as Search
and Rescue, Maritime Regulations, and Marine Safety. Research into oil spill prevention and response, and Aquatic Nuisance Species prevention supports the Marine Environmental Protection Program. Development of advanced navigation systems to improve the flow of goods and services via our nations waterways also
serves a traditional Coast Guard mission.
United States Secret Service
The United States Secret Service (USSS) Portfolio develops and deploys advanced
technologies to enhance that agencys protective and investigative capabilities. This
portfolio supports the unique USSS mission by developing and deploying advanced
technologies to enhance protective and investigative capabilities and has established
its first direct-funded R&D program. The Portfolio focuses on input from threatbased models and the lessons learned from direct operational experience.
Programs and Offices
Office for Inter-operability and Compatibility
The Office for Inter-operability and Compatibilitys (OIC) mission is to strengthen
and integrate inter-operability and compatibility efforts to improve local, tribal,
State, and federal public safety preparedness and response. Non-inter-operable, incompatible communications equipment and a lack of standardized operating procedures have plagued the public safety community for decades. Often public safety
agencies cannot perform mission-critical duties because they cannot effectively cooperate with other agencies or operate in other jurisdictions. By coordinating and
leveraging the Departments inter-operability programs and related efforts, OIC reduces unnecessary duplication of effort, identifies and promotes best practices, and
coordinates activities related to inter-operability. OIC manages programs to address
inter-operability and compatibility for public safety providers and the larger home-

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land security community. Initial program areas include communications (including
SAFECOM and Disaster Management programs), equipment, training, and other
programs (including the Risk Assessment Policy Group).
Counter-MANPADS
The Counter-MANPADS Program focuses on demonstrating the viability, economic costs, and effectiveness of adapting existing military technology to protect
commercial aircraft from the threat of shoulder-fired missiles, i.e., MANPADS. Its
goal is to integrate and evaluate existing Counter-MANPADS technologies for potential use by the commercial airline industry, not to develop new technologies. The
Program balances cost, suitability, and performance to meet the needs of commercial
aviation community stakeholders. Suitable countermeasure systems must be capable
of being implemented with minimal impact on air carrier and airport operations,
maintenance, and support activities. After completing the second of three planned
program phases, DHS will provide a report detailing the equipment performance,
projected costs, and potential deployment options. The anticipated release date for
the report is mid- to late-March 2006.
University Programs
University Programs coordinate, leverage, and use the academic communitys immense intellectual capital to address current and future mission-critical homeland
security needs, through both research and educational programs. Our goals are: 1)
developing the scientific research base necessary to advancing knowledge in homeland security fields; 2) developing a cadre of technical experts within the Nations
workforce who are trained to address current and future challenges in securing the
homeland; and 3) ensuring the results of their research are disseminated to DHS
and its partners. The University Programs portfolio is invested largely in two areas:
a university-based system of DHS University Research Centers, and a Scholars and
Fellows Program intended to build and develop the next generation of academic researchers in disciplines that are relevant or essential to homeland security. University Programs is now a catalyst for mission-relevant research at more than 40 major
research universities, and is building capacity worldwide by attracting over 150 faculty and their peers, hundreds of graduate and undergraduate researchers, as well
as DHS Scholars and Fellows from more than 110 institutions, to focus on issues
critical to homeland security.
SAFETY Act
In accordance with criteria set forth in the SAFETY Act of 2002 and Interim Regulations the Office of SAFETY Act Implementation evaluates technologies. As part
of the Homeland Security Act of 2002, Public Law 107296, Congress enacted the
SAFETY Act to provide risk management and litigation management protections
for sellers of qualified anti-terrorism technologies. The Acts purpose is to encourage
development and deployment of anti-terrorism technologies, particularly those
aimed at preventing, detecting, identifying, or deterring acts of terrorism, or to limiting the harm that such acts might otherwise cause. The SAFETY Act creates certain liability limitations for claims arising out of, relating to, or resulting from an
act of terrorism where qualified anti-terrorism technologies have been deployed.
The offices evaluations are designed to advise DHS leadership on whether to grant
SAFETY Act protections to technologies that applicants submit. In order to stimulate the development and adoption of valuable new technologies, the office seeks to
raise public awareness of the benefits of the protections available under the SAFETY Act. The office also coordinates with other DHS elements and other federal agencies to support those offices missions and minimize the burden on applicants for
SAFETY Act protection. This advance coordination regularly occurs in cases where
the SAFETY ACT could play a positive role in a pending federal procurement.
RDT&E CONSOLIDATION
To ensure strategic direction and avoid duplication, the S&T Directorate is
charged with consolidating the Departments research and development activities.
As I mentioned earlier, we have made significant steps by integrating the Transportation Security Laboratory into the S&T Directorate. We are continuing to further
unify and coordinate efforts to develop and implement scientific and technological
countermeasures.
In keeping with legislative intent of the Homeland Security Act of 2002 and the
FY 2004 and 2005 Homeland Security Appropriations, the S&T Directorate, through
RDT&E consolidation, seeks to:
Bring under a single accountable authority, the scientific and engineering
personnel and most RDT&E resources of the Department;

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Maximize the efficiency and effectiveness of the Departments RDT&E capacity;
Develop and expand synergistic RDT&E programs that cut across the Departments activities;
Create a world class RDT&E capability; and
Allow the other organizational elements within DHS to focus on their operational missions by eliminating within them the specialized management infrastructure required to manage organic RDT&E.
Major RDT&E consolidation measures in FY 2006:
TSL in Atlantic City, New Jersey became part of the S&T Directorate in FY
2006. The S&T Directorate has been working closely with TSA to ensure the
seamless transition of TSLs staff and research capabilities. A Memorandum
of Understanding is guiding the transition of responsibility from TSA to the
S&T Directorate for the assets, liabilities, and program capabilities of the
TSL and defining a collaborative framework that will minimize the disruption
of program work at TSL and prevent the duplication of effort during this
transition. The S&T Directorate has been assessing and integrating existing
TSL projects into its transportation security and high explosives portfolio
strategies as appropriate.
Funds originally requested by the CBP to support salaries for those assigned
to its Research, Development, and Evaluation Branch were likewise integrated into the S&T Directorate mission.
In FY 2007, the S&T Directorate will continue to perform its role as the primary
research, development, testing and evaluation arm of the Department.
TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER
Providing operational end-users with the technology and capabilities they need to
detect and prevent terrorist attacks, the means of terrorism and other illegal activities is the capstone of the S&T Directorates mission.
To successfully carry out this aspect of our mission, the S&T Directorate actively
works to transition cutting-edge homeland security technologies to end-users within
the Department, other federal agencies, State and local government entities, and
the private sector. Some recent accomplishments in this area include:
Regional Technology Integration Initiative (RTII)In FY 2005, RTII completed integrated community-based vulnerability assessments in four pilot locations. We are currently working with these communities to identify appropriate homeland security technology solutions for the gaps identified. In FY
2006, we are focusing on technology deployments in these four regions and
on the transfer of lessons learned to peer cities. Additional locations may
be added in the future as we identify gaps that have not been addressed
through the pilot locations. RTII provides the basis for improved preparedness, mitigation, and response by regional authorities, including cities and
counties that will result in lives saved and greater effectiveness of disaster
management resources. This program is a fundamental transition path for
technologies that will help regional authorities across the Nation counter
emerging threats.
DODs 1401 ProgramPursuant to the direction of Congress to quickly deploy
technology where it is needed, DHS is working with DOD and DOJ to identify
and transfer current appropriate technology to federal, State, and local emergency responders for homeland security applications. The 1401 Technology
Transfer Program is aimed at efficiently transitioning these technologies to
the broader public safety community. As part of this effort, key interagency
stakeholders selected five high-priority technologies from a field of 550 DOD
technologies that matched a list of first responder needs. Through the 1401
Program, the S&T Directorate will ensure that technologies transferred to
first responders meet standards of inter-operability and compatibility with existing public safety operations, and that they are tested and evaluated by first
responders. In support of this role, the S&T Directorate OIC sponsored a series of focus groups with public safety practitioners in August 2005 in an effort to validate the function and application of these technologies in their respective environments.
Technology Clearing HouseThe S&T Directorate has awarded a contract to
the Public Safety and Security Institute for Technology (PSITEC) to provide
these services, which will all be available through a Knowledge Portal. When
complete, the Knowledge Portal will provide a one-stop-shop for access to rel-

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evant information from a wide variety of sources, including the existing Responder Knowledge Base and the Lessons Learned Information Sharing
(LLIS) created by the Memorial Institute for the Prevention of Terrorism
(MIPT), under sponsorship from the DHS Office of Domestic Preparedness. Its
architecture will be open, inter-operable, and non-proprietary to facilitate cost
effective, long-term operations, maintenance and upgrades.
Next-Generation Cyber Security Technologies ProgramTo stimulate transfer
of DHS-funded technologies into mainstream commercial products and services, FY 2006 activities emphasize testing, evaluation, and piloting of the
most promising technologies emerging from the now completed program that
began in FY 2004.
While highlighting these successes, it is important to note that the transfer of
technology often requires numerous intricate, incremental steps over many years.
Although the basic scientific principles that underpin a particular technology may
be leveraged, nevertheless significant re-engineering is required to make the technology suitable for homeland security purposes. In most cases, technology developed
for one purpose, such as a military application, may not be able to be transferred
in a straightforward manner to civil operations. The requirements for maintenance
and support, for performance, and for total cost-of-ownership often must be re-engineered or otherwise resolved to permit such transfers.
During the next year, the S&T Directorate will work closely with its government,
international and private sector partners to overcome these institutional and technical challenges. In FY 2007, the S&T Directorate plans to continue its technology
transfer to end-users. Plans include:
The Facility Restoration Technology DemonstrationThis demonstration will
focus on the transfer and application of the concepts developed in FY 2005
and FY 2006 for airports to other types of critical facilities such as subway
systems and other transportation nodes. In addition, FY 2007 accomplishments will focus on filling data and technology gaps critical to the restoration
of facilities such as the decontamination of sensitive equipment and the interactions of chemical agents on surfaces.
Technology Clearing HouseThe Emergent and Prototypical Technology Portfolio will continue to support the Technology Clearinghouse in FY 2007. Development plans include: adding procurement decision support tools and advanced search mechanisms; expanding content to include topics such as public
health information; forming communities of interest and professional discussion boards; and establishing a technology transfer community database.
STRATEGIC PARTNERSHIPS
The S&T Directorate places great importance on its interactions with the other
federal departments and agencies that are contributing to the Nations homeland security science and technology base. We are accustomed to working in an interagency
working group mode, and have found this approach to be quite effective in addressing a variety of key areas. To proceed in this current effort, we must have a complete picture of all Federal Government components involved in research and development, and regularly utilize the collective wisdom that the interagency process
brings to the table. We must understand one anothers R&D capabilities and current
activities and plans, both near- and long-term, because only when we have an accurate and comprehensive picture of the current state of the Nation will we be able
to effectively develop a roadmap for success.
Only through increased communication and partnering are we able to leverage existing federal resources to sustain the science and technology advances essential to
homeland security. These advances in turn provide security solutions that are technically, economically, and socially sustainable. This superior technical base continuously enables the United States to stay ahead of the changing threats and escalating abilities of our adversaries.
Research and development needed to enhance the Nations capabilities to thwart
terrorist acts and mitigate natural disasters is being conducted by the Department
of Commerce (DOC), USDA, DOD, DOE, DOJ, HHS, DOS, and Veterans Affairs as
well as within the National Science Foundation (NSF), EPA, other federal agencies.
By bringing these organizations together through strategic partnerships, we are
creating an enduring homeland security science and technology community. As directed by the Homeland Security Act of 2002, the S&T Directorate is continuing to
solidify this community by coordinating the Federal Governments civilian efforts to
identify and develop countermeasures against current and emerging threats. In support of these efforts during the last year, the S&T Directorate has:

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Worked with the OSTP, the Homeland Security Council, the National Security Council, the Office of Management and Budget and the Office of the Vice
President in the effort to coordinate homeland security research and development across the entire United States Government.
Led the development of the National Plan for Homeland Security Science and
Technology. This strategic plan will establish R&D priorities within and
across federal programs and identify opportunities to leverage the R&D efforts of other agencies.
Established meaningful interagency interactions with Federal, State and local
government and private sector entities to meet the high priority homeland security RDT&E needs of the Nation. This includes actively participating in or
leading several interagency working groups. Such groups foster an active exchange of information and assist participating agencies in identifying related
needs and requirements, conducting research and development of mutual benefit, and avoiding duplication of effort.
Through these and other interagency interactions, the S&T Directorate is bringing together the vast homeland security scientific and technology resources of the
Nation. Significant accomplishments and ongoing collaborative efforts from across
the S&T Directorate are listed below:
Biodefense CollaborationDHS and the S&T Directorate partner with, and
support, other federal departments and agencies with lead responsibilities in
biological threatsa major focus of our countermeasure R&D. We are working with the HHS on medical countermeasures and mass casualty response;
USDA on agriculture biosecurity and food security; and EPA on decontamination and water security including a jointly funded center for microbial risk assessments. In a major initiative, S&T is collaborating with other federal partners to establish the National Interagency Biodefense Campus, which includes our partnership with the DOD on the National Biodefense Analysis
and Countermeasures Center (NBACC). This Center will provide the Nation
with cutting edge capabilities in bioforensics and biological threat characterization. S&T and DODs Defense Threat Reduction Agency (DTRA) are collaborating on BioNet, a program to integrate military and civilian biomonitoring activities and establish a shared communications process to provide
timely biothreat information. The S&T Directorate maintains a close liaison
with the DOS on matters relating to the Biological Weapons Convention
(BWC) which is essential to DHS biological countermeasure programs and
compliance posture.
Chemical Countermeasures CollaborationThe S&T Directorate is working
with DOD to plan a Chemical Security Analysis Center (CSAC) that will
serve as a knowledge management, threat characterization, and forensic analysis hub that will address a full range of chemical threats, particularly chemical warfare agents and non-traditional agents. We are also coordinating with
HHS Centers for Disease Control (CDC) and the EPA on the larger Chemical
Laboratory Response Network (CLRN). In the aftermath of Hurricane
Katrina, we have already seen how components of CLRN will produce a more
coordinated, more effective laboratory response effort. The CDC activated the
Laboratory Response Network to conduct sampling and analysis for identification of toxic chemicals and pathogens in Gulf Coast areas.
Critical Infrastructure ProtectionUnder HSPD7, Critical Infrastructure
Protection, DHS is assigned the overall responsibility for coordinating the national effort to ensure the security of the Nations critical infrastructure and
key resource sectors. Per this directive, the S&T Directorate is working with
the Chemical Sector Coordinating Council, comprised of 16 key stakeholders,
to draft the Nations strategic vision for better securing the chemical sector
infrastructure. Our key federal partners in chemical security include DOD,
HHS, the FBI, the EPA, and the interagency Technical Support Working
Group (TSWG). In addition, we established the Process Control Systems
Forum (PCSF) to develop new cross-industry guidelines, protocols and system
architecture for provably secure, next-generation Supervisory Control and
Data Acquisition (SCADA) and related types of process and distributed control systems. PCSF is comprised of government and private industry stakeholders, owners, and operators.
MaritimeThe Science and Technology Directorates Coast Guard R&D program is characterized by its many partnerships with other federal agencies
and international R&D groups. Beyond the program support for the Coast
Guards traditional missions, we have ongoing collaborations in the maritime

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security domain. We are supporting the Departments participation in a broad
maritime security program review looking at all current U.S. Government
maritime policy initiatives and ensuring interagency alignment to guide a focused national effort to improve Maritime Domain Awareness. Maritime Domain Awareness includes all systems, sensors, and command and control systems necessary to detect, identify, and determine the threat potential of all
vessel traffic. It also includes Port Security to protect important harbors. In
accordance with National Security Presidential Directive 41 and HSPD13,
Maritime Security Policy, issued last December, DOD and DHS are leading
an interagency initiative to develop the National Strategy for Maritime Security. The S&T Directorate is supporting that effort as well as the ongoing
comprehensive National Maritime Response Plan that clarifies lead agency
roles and responsibilities regarding maritime threats.
Transportation Security PartnershipsThe S&T Directorate works in close
cooperation and collaboration through a Cargo Security Integrated Planning
Process Team (IPPT) process. The IPPT is co-chaired by S&T and the DHS
Policy Office, and has representatives from within the Department as well as
the Departments of State, Commerce, Defense, Transportation and Energy.
Through this IPPT, DHS actively ensures coordination with existing government programs and leverages those relationships to foster a cohesive program
strategy and avoid the duplication of effort. Other transportation security efforts focus on Freight Rail Security with the Federal Railroad Administration
and the S&T Directorates ongoing Counter-MANPADs program. In partnership with other federal agencies (FAA, DOD, DOS), the S&T Directorate initiated a Congressionally-directed aggressive System Development and Demonstration program to counter the threat of shoulder-fired missiles. The program demonstrates and evaluates the possible migration of existing military
Counter-MANPADS technologies to the commercial airline industry.
Border SecurityOver the past three years, the S&T Directorate has coordinated extensively with DOD, the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), and FAA with respect to Unmanned Aerial Vehicle (UAV) operations and evaluations for the U.S. Border Patrol. The UAV Executive Steering Group was established to advise the Secretary of Homeland Security and
provide a forum for communication, coordination and cooperation. The UAV
Executive Steering Group is made up of representatives from DHS components, DOD and the FAA.
International Partnerships
The S&T Directorate recognizes the enormous benefits gained from working with
the international community to seek technology solutions to our common homeland
security problems. We have worked in concert with our Federal Government agency
counterparts to both negotiate agreements with key foreign partners and to implement strategic programs under those agreements that meet our mutual high-priority needs.
The S&T Directorate is currently the United States lead agency for umbrella S&T
Agreements that have been created with Canada, the United Kingdom, and most
recently with Australia. These instruments provide the mechanism for us to share
resources, ideas, and information in order to leverage our individual investments,
to benefit from each others experiences and perspectives of others, and also importantly to create consistency in the tools and systems that we ultimately field. We
are taking advantage of the opportunities presented by these partnerships across
the entire suite of civil security mission requirements.
Cooperative research, development, testing and evaluation activities are being
pursued with other countries as well. In particular, we are looking at ways to enhance an already robust collaboration with Israel, especially in testing of explosives
detection and mitigation technologies in operational environments. As part of the
Security and Prosperity Partnership initiative, we have reached out to Mexico to
begin a dialog on technology to address agricultural security. We understand the
need to engage foreign entities on technology issues around travel and trade security and have initiated interactions with Singapore, the Netherlands, Sweden and
Japan in this arena.
CONCLUSION
In conclusion, I thank you for the opportunity to appear before you today. I can
assure you that we are on-task, and that we are providing the planners, operators,
and responders we serve with the best support our science can offer. Homeland security continues to benefit tremendously from the work of our nations scientists and

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engineers. The knowledge, the systems, the methods, and the tools they give us do
much to make us safer and more prepared.
On behalf of all of us in the Science and Technology Directorate, I thank you for
your continuing support and counsel. I am proud of what we have been able to accomplish in just a few years, and I trust we will continue to live up to the responsibility the Nation has given us. I will be happy to answer any questions that you
may have.
BIOGRAPHY

FOR

CHARLES E. MCQUEARY

Dr. Charles E. McQueary was appointed by President Bush as Under Secretary


for Science and Technology of the Department of Homeland Security and confirmed
by the U.S. Senate in March of 2003.
Dr. McQueary leads the research and development arm of the Department, utilizing our nations scientific and technological resources to provide federal, State,
and local officials with the technology and capabilities to protect the homeland.
Prior to joining Homeland Security, Dr. McQueary served as President, General
Dynamics Advanced Technology systems, in Greensboro, N.C. Earlier in his career,
Dr. McQueary served as President and Vice President of business units for AT&T,
Lucent Technologies, and as a Director for AT&T Bell Laboratories.
In addition to his professional experience, Dr. McQueary has served his community in many leadership roles as Chair of the Board, and Campaign Chair, of the
United Way of Greensboro; Member of the Board of Trustees of North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University; Member of the Guilford Technical Community College Presidents CEO Advisory Committee; Member of Board of World
Trade Center North Carolina; Chair for Action Greensboro Public Education Initiative; and as a Member of the Board of Guilford County Education Network.
Dr. McQueary holds both a Ph.D. in Engineering Mechanics and an M.S. in Mechanical Engineering from the University of Texas, Austin. The University of Texas
has named McQueary a Distinguished Engineering Graduate.

DISCUSSION
Chairman BOEHLERT. And once again let me thank you on behalf
of the entire Committee for your outstanding public service.
Dr. MCQUEARY. Thank you.
Chairman BOEHLERT. We wish you well.
Dr. MCQUEARY. Its been a pleasure to serve in this role, I assure
you.
Chairman BOEHLERT. You know, when youre charged up as you
are within the Administration, and I am and we are and the majority up here, theres always a temptation to have this as a sort of
cheerleading session and we high five each other and talk about all
the good things and boy, there are a lot of good things to talk
about, but that produces nothing of any real value as we go forward. So instead of focusing on all thats right in a budget that
does much better by science, and instead of focusing on the vision
thats coming into sharper focus because of the budget and the
words and deeds from the Administration, Im going to talk about
some of the other things that are somewhat problematic, if you
will.
Let me start out with one, Dr. Sampson, for you, because both
Mr. Gordon and I and just about everybody we talk to are real believers in the Manufacturing Extension Partnership. In the budget
submission from the Administration, requesting $46 million aint
going to fly, Ill tell you. I am determined to up that and so is he
and I think the majority in Congress are. Were talking about, relatively speaking, nickels and dimes for a program that has proven
its value. So tell me how you think the program would work if we

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were dumb enough to only provide $46 million. Can you explain
that to me?
Dr. SAMPSON. Certainly. First of all, I think what I would point
out is that in the budget development process, our responsibility is
to identify priorities that we believe address the most critical needs
that we have. Secondly, MEP is just one method by which NIST
supports manufacturing in America. Over half of all NIST core laboratory functions directly or indirectly benefit manufacturing. At
NIST we have somewhere in excess of 1800 visiting scientists
working from industry and from academia, and if the Congress decides to move forward with what we believe are the right set of priorities for NIST, what we would do would be several things. First
of all, we will begin
Chairman BOEHLERT. Doctor, well, I mean the time is limited
and Im going to hold myself to the same time. Just let me signal
you so you can go back and
Dr. SAMPSON. Okay.
Chairman BOEHLERT.report to everybody that were determined to do better by MEP and were determined to do well by
NIST, but this is something that really impacts on the small business manufacturer right on the front lines and theyre oftentimes
like one-armed paperhangers. They dont have research departments. They dont have all these other departments, but they need
some help and its a good program and it makes sense, so I hope
you wont be unhappy if we force more money into this program on
Commerce. Thats it.
Now let me go to Dr. Bodman. As you know, this committee, particularly Chairman Biggert and I, have long been concerned about
the lack of any plan for the Climate Change Technology Initiative.
Now that, thanks to you and I want to give you high marks for
this, a drafted strategic plan has finally been released, were still
kind of concerned. There doesnt seem to be much in there to help
set priorities or milestones. Could you tell us how you see that plan
moving forward from here and what you hope it will accomplish?
And just let me say I think were finally getting to the point where
people no longer think that my concern about global climate change
and the scientific communitys concern about global climate change
is just a figment of our imaginations. Its for real and weve got to
deal with it in a responsible way. So I give the microphone to you,
Mr. Secretary.
Secretary BODMAN. Well, without getting into a debate about climate change, I would observe that this Administration has been
doing everything it can do with respect to both science, which I was
intimately involved with during my days when I had Dr. Sampsons
job and now at the Energy Department, where we are responsible
for the technology program that really covers a wide range of
things, each of those programs have very specific milestones and
goals and objectives and so forth, and we lay those out each year
in the budget, so Im in receipt of a letter that you and Congresswoman Biggert sent and Im in the final stages of responding to
that, but Im comfortable that we have adequate goals and objectives. And the hope here is to develop technologies that will, when
they emerge, which theyre starting to do, into the marketplace will

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be able to make a significant contribution by reducing greenhouse
gas emissions.
Chairman BOEHLERT. Mr. Secretary, Im comfortable if youre
comfortable because I have a very high regard for you and Im very
much looking forward to the response that is in the final stages of
preparation, but we wont get into a debate about global climate
change because I know that you know, and even the President
knows, its for real. Its not the figment of somebodys vivid imagination. And I know and you know and the President knows that
humans have contributed to it, and I know and you know and I
think the President realizes that we have to do something about
it, so the discussion would be what that doing something should
represent, not whether or not the problem exists is for real. So
thank you very much for that answer. We very much look forward
to your response.
And, Dr. Bement, as several of us have noted, were not happy
with the level of education commitment at NSF, which we think is
critical to the Nations future. Can you please tell us what you
think the role of NSF is in education? What is the justification for
reducing K through 12 programs just as the Nation is focusing increasingly on the inadequacies of science and math education?
Dr. BEMENT. Yes, Mr. Chairman. First of all, I would like to say
that education, outreach, and diversity are core values throughout
the Foundation, not just in the EHR Directorate. It permeates
every directorate and every office within the Foundation. And the
commitment right now in the 2007 budget is $816 million in the
EHR Directorate, but its $450 million in the Research and Related
Activities account, and that includes activities at every level, from
K to 12 to undergraduate to graduate and early career and also in
broadening participation.
And just to give some examples, in K to 12 theres the GK12
Program in the R&RA account, which brings mentors into the
classroom. There are also Research Experiences for Teachers. Now
these programs are well recognized by the National Science Board
and theyve encouraged us to put more commitment in our research
directorates, because the kind of programs we can bring into the
classroom gives more hands-on experience, creates more motivation, creates more enthusiasm and puts more bright minds into the
pipeline for science and engineering, which is a critical need in the
Nation at the present time.
Without belaboring that fact, I have eight pages of examples of
programs within our R&RA
Chairman BOEHLERT. Im sure you have.
Dr. BEMENT.which Id like to present
Chairman BOEHLERT. And I know from long experience that the
Administration sends its witnesses up and boy oh boy, youve got
volumes to tell us what great work youre doing, and you know
what? I think youre doing great work and I am a cheerleader for
the National Science Foundation, but Im anxious to get to that
area where I think we want to give you an opportunity to do even
better than what you are doing. We have some dispute about how
you come up with the bottom line, but the important point is that
science and math education is in need of attention in this country.
Dr. BEMENT. Yes.

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Chairman BOEHLERT. Its critical that we invest more in that and
its also important for everybody else in this town to recognize that
you guys at NSF have a vital role to play. We just cant leave it
to the Department of Education, and weve got to make darn sure
you
Dr. BEMENT. Right.
Chairman BOEHLERT.at NSF and the Department of Education
are working collaboratively and youre marching forward together,
not like in the past. I can recall one time when I had to introduce
the Secretary of Education to the Director of the National Science
Foundation. They didnt know each other. I mean, that was really
mind boggling, but we dont have that now.
Dr. BEMENT. Well, Mr. Chairman
Chairman BOEHLERT. I can
Dr. BEMENT.we have a common mission and I
Chairman BOEHLERT. Thats super.
Dr. BEMENT.appreciate your support. And I should add, Ive
met with the Secretary of Education at least twice.
Chairman BOEHLERT. Well, thats great and keep meeting. Mr.
Gordon.
Mr. GORDON. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. I will follow your admonition and try not to be a cheerleader here today. Let me
Chairman BOEHLERT. But you will concede there is much to
cheer about. Thank you.
Mr. GORDON. I want to, as always, or not always, but most of the
time say that I am in such agreement with the Chairman. I understand, Dr. Bement, beside being a scholar, youre also a soldier but
I know you cant do anything about this K to 12 situation. Its been
cut 37 percent. You listed all the good things youre doing, but the
funding has been cut by over one-third for those. I hope
Dr. BEMENT. Are we talking about MSP or K to 12 education?
Mr. GORDON. K to 12.
Dr. BEMENT. That hasnt been cut.
Mr. GORDON. If you look at the budget, over the lastI think it
was seven percent this year. Its been 37 percent, I think, from
2001 to 2004.
Dr. BEMENT. Well, again I would argue that in the EHR account,
if thats the only account youre looking at, youll see some cuts in
K to 12, but you also ought to look at the total budget.
Mr. GORDON. Well, I think, if we look at the Augustine Commission Report, K to 12 science education was really a major thrust
there. I have put their recommendations into legislation. Again,
youve listed all the good things youre doing. Again, Im just sorry
that its being cut by one-third. You are a soldier and so you can
you know, and if you can put on a grin on that one, you
Dr. BEMENT. Well, I had.
Mr. GORDON.you really are a good one. Let me also say, Mr.
Chairman, that concerning the MEP Program, clearly I think it is
a bipartisan program and its distinguished by the Governors Association, saying its important. And, Dr. Sampson, you pointed out
a rosy picture, but the fact of the matter is that all of the surveys
taken of our countrys attitudes right now, say were going in the
wrong direction and the economy is one of those areas that they
say is going in the wrong direction. And I think a part of that is

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the fact that since 2001, weve lost 2.8 million manufacturing jobs.
The MEP Program really is our only small, little effort to try to
save those jobs and improve those jobs, and you talked about, what
a good job NIST is doing. Its being cut by 23 percent. You know,
we just need more help in these areas.
And, Mr. Chairman, you pointed out, rightfully so, that this is
an important group of individuals with the panel. They are also
dedicated public servants and I would say all have made personal
sacrifices to do what theyre doing and I congratulate them for
that, but constitutionally, we are an equal branch of the government. We do have the responsibility of oversight. We are busy also,
but part of being busy is trying to do our oversight, so I think we
we need to move forward with that.
And finally, Secretary Bodman, Jerry Costello couldnt be here
today. He has another committee meeting, but he wanted me to
thank you and the Administration for their commitment to the
FutureGen issue and hell be submitting questions to the record.
Im glad I could say something nice. Im going to tell himbecause
Im sure its going to be news to him, as well as to the world, that
you say that the Administration is doing all that it can on climate
change. Ill let him know that.
And finally, let me say, Dr. Marburger, I had nominated you for
the gold medal and now I would like to present that to you. You
performed with grace. Once again this year its just interesting how
when you want to prove the commitment of the Administration on
overall spending for science, you include earmarks. But then, if
there are problems, you say bad things about the earmarks. One
area you pointed out was that five percent of the budget was earmarks. That meant that 95 percent were your priorities. You know,
Ill remind you that the entire Administrations budget is an earmark. You are earmarking what your priorities are. I dont think
its unreasonable that Congress, an equal branch of government,
going through legislative hearings, having some bit of expertise,
would also like to have some role in establishing that. Youve got
95 percent of what you wanted. You know, I think to say that five
percent were earmarks, that were legislative priorities, I think it
came out pretty well. So, again, my congratulations at your gold
medal performance and I appreciate you coming here and being
with us today.
Chairman BOEHLERT. Thank you very much. Dr. Bartlett.
Mr. BARTLETT. Thank you very much, gentlemen. I appreciated
your comments. Were talking today about the federal R&D budget,
but this is being focused on our competitiveness agenda and thats
very appropriate. Essential to that, of course, is the country turning out adequate numbers of well trained scientists, mathematicians and engineers, and do you know the statistics? China graduates more English speaking engineers than we do and a fair percentage of the English speaking engineers that we graduate are
Chinese students. Theyre now graduating what? I hear various
numbers. Six, eight times as many engineers as were graduating.
India, two, three times as many engineers as were graduating. I
would submit, gentlemen, that a culture gets what it appreciates.
When I was going to school, we were squares. Thats about when
you went to school, I guess. And now I guess bright young boys are

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geeks and nerds, and pretty girls wont date them, and really
bright girls have to play dumb to get a date. How smart is this of
a society where our bright young people are clearly under-appreciated? Rarely is a scientific achiever invited to the White House
to be acclaimed there, and I submit, gentlemen, that were not
going to turn this around. Money alone wont do it and the good
intentions of your departments wont do it. This will turn around
when we as a culture appreciate this kind of endeavor.
Id like to start with Dr. Marburger and just go down the table.
What can we do as a culture so that our bright young peopleI
talk to a lot of them and they are increasingly going into what I
caution them could be destructive pursuits. Theyre becoming political scientists and lawyers. Now, we need a few of each of those,
but I would submit that weve got more than a few of each of those
and Id like to see more of our bright young minds go into science,
math and engineering, but thats not going to happen until we as
a society appreciate them. How do we send that message?
Dr. MARBURGER. Well, Congressman, I think that one of the best
ways is to have the leadership of the Nation raise the visibility of
science as an important function for our society. The American
Competitiveness Initiative was just an enormous stroke of publicity
and positive visible leadership. The President, following his State
of the Union speech, visited a number of sites around the country,
one of which was a training site that had been established by Intel
Corporation in Albuquerque for bringing teachers into contact with
real-life scientists and engineers. A major part of the initiative is
to create a much larger core of adjunct teachers who can come into
the classroom and let students see a real live human being and
how excited they are about their work and how they feel what
theyre contributing to the Nations future competitiveness. I believe that leadership is really important and frankly, the enthusiasm that Congress has shown, including Members of this committee, for this initiative has simply added to a groundswell of recognition for the importance of these professions to the Nation. So
I believe were on our way to a new era of awareness, and I dont
doubt it will have a major impact on the graduation rates in
science, engineering, math professions.
Mr. BARTLETT. Dr. Bodman.
Secretary BODMAN. I think Dr. Marburger said it very well. I
think it takes leadership. I think it takes Congress. I think it takes
the President. The President has stepped up and made proposals,
has made, I thought, a very definitive statement about the importance of this to this country and if you have the President talking
about this, I dont know how youd do much better than that, sir.
So I do think that we have the potential, if we get the kind of support from Congress that I hope we will get for the proposals, I
think we are embarking on a new era.
I am a product of the Sputnik generation. I used to go out in the
backyard as a boy and a not so young boy, I guess, and look up
in the sky and look for that light going across because the Russians
had one-upped us and that led to a number of initiatives, legislative initiatives, and Presidents Eisenhower and Kennedy did a
great job of, I think, capitalizing on that. Were at a point now
where were having a similar kind of experience and the impor-

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tance of science research and development, particularly the physical sciences, and its impact on the economy, and I think its starting to become better known throughout our society, and Im hopeful. I dont know what more to say than that, sir.
Mr. BARTLETT. I remember a cartoon from that era, recognizing
the increased interest in engineering science and math. It was a
kid; a freckled faced, bucktooth kid who said that six months ago
I couldnt even spell engineer and now I are one. Oh, we need that
kind of
Secretary BODMAN. I, too, saw that cartoon. I didnt like it a lot,
because I was once, sir. Yes.
Chairman BOEHLERT. Thank you very much, Dr. Bartlett. Your
time has expired. But I cant help making an observation. You guys
get it and we get it, about the importance of the subject matter
being discussed today, but it warms the cockles of my heart to see
this attendance here, and one of the things we have to do, Dr.
Bartlett, is to get the media to focus on this very important subject
in a significant way.
For example, Mr. Secretary, you and I were down at the White
House, and I dont mean to name drop, but Monday, when the
President of the United States, in a highly visible ceremony, presented the National Medal of Science and the National Medal of
Technology to some very distinguished Americans and to some
companies who have made a major investment and produce something of broad-ranging implication that helps fuel our economy and
keeps us in our number one position. And guess what? I picked up
yesterday mornings papers. I didnt expect to see my picture with
the President, but I expected to see some stories about these wonderful, wonderful deeds performed by these magnificent national
treasures and it was almost ignored by the national media, and
weve got to get them enlisted. Weve finally got the attention of the
business community. I keep telling them, you know, you got to
lobby for something other than the latest tweaking in the tax policy
necessary to ensure a better bottom line, or the adjustment in
trade policy thats necessary to put you in a more favorable position. Youve got to tell us, in the Congress and in the Executive
Branch, the importance of investment by the United States Government in research, and the importance of training the workforce
of tomorrow. Youve got to start training them today.
So I hope all the media representatives in the room will take to
heart what Im saying. We want you to partner with us in getting
this message out. With that I am pleased to recognize the distinguished gentlelady from Texas, Ms. Eddie Bernice Johnson.
Ms. JOHNSON. Thank you, Mr. Chairman, and I apologize for
having to run to another meeting, but I will ask unanimous consent to submit my complete statement as well as my questions.
Chairman BOEHLERT. Without objection, so ordered.
Ms. JOHNSON. Thank you. And simply say that, to the distinguished panelists, your leadership will determine where we are in
this world. From K through 12 to higher education, to research, all
of that, you are very, very important leaders. And you know, I like
and respect our President, but he is a slow learner when it comes
to this, and its going to be up to you to give him as much of your
information as possible. We get comments about our attitude on

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global warming. We are getting to the point where our science is
being doubted by other countries. Thats the worst we can get. We
were told not to attend another meeting, after he came into office,
on global weather change, and its unfortunate because we see the
results. Im asking all of you to spend more time educating our
leadership in this area. Nothing is more critical than to educate
young people, to get our scientists out there and become a leader
in the world again in this area. We are really not right now because were not prepared, but we can retrieve our standing, but its
got to be with your help and your leadership. Thank you.
Chairman BOEHLERT. Thank you very much. Dr. Ehlers.
Mr. EHLERS. Thank you, Mr. Chairman, and thank you to the
panel. Dr. Bement commented that hes having trouble because
hes constantly smiling ever since the announcement of the President. Ive had that same problem. In fact, the Speaker appointed
me Chairman of the House Administration Committee to try to get
rid of that smile. And those who know the committee know why.
At any rate, congratulations to all of you and I thank you for your
good work. And as you know, Ive been fighting for this for 12 years
now and its very, very heartwarming to see progress on this front.
I also have to agree with the comments made about education
and Im disappointed at the cuts in the National Science Foundation and parts of their education programs. I understand the reason; I simply dont agree with it and I want to state that on the
record. And Dr. Bartlett was quite right in commenting that, you
know, being a nerd is not socially acceptable in high school. You
know, and he said, you know, pretty girls dont date nerds. I
thought that was true when I was in high school. I, however, found
out that was just because I was obnoxious, and once I solved that
problem, I married a pretty girl.
The point he made about being accepted, and its also the point
that the Chairman made about the announcements about the winners, I dont know what it is about the public. They all admire scientists, but dont want to get too close to them and that carries
over in high school. Im particularly worried about the young
women in elementary and secondary grades, where some are conveyed this cultural idea that girls cant do science or cant do math.
Thats just nonsense. Were the only country that has that culture
and we have to get rid of it, and if you have any bright ideas of
how to get rid of it, thats very important.
But every time I visit a high school and speak to the students,
I point out to them that theyre making very important decisions
about their future by way of the courses they select. And I also tell
them they shouldnt look down on nerds, because if they are not
a nerd, theyre going to end up working for one, and I think thats
a very important truth that they have to recognize. Thats the direction the world is going. What Im trying to get at is the importance of conveying that taking math and science ensures a more
stable economic future, and were not communicating that to kids
and thats what we have to do. Its not a matter of just being socially acceptable, that it affects their ability in the years ahead to
take care of themselves and their family.
I also want to express my concern about whats done to the MEP
Program and the ATP Program. Well continue working on that. I

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dont want to add to that. But getting back to the climate change
research, a question for Dr. Marburger and then Dr. Sampson. The
Administration, to its credit, sometime ago, I believe 2003, completed a strategic plan for the Climate Change Science Program
and this was supposed to guide a coordinated strategic budget request for climate change research across the entire Federal Government. Yet every year it seems we see a shift in priorities and funding requests for the various climate change programs that are a
part of the Climate Change Strategic Initiative, or Science Program. And Im wondering, is this really working well? Is the program really coordinated? Have you settled on a strategic plan? Are
you following that plan or are you still running into the problems
that, because its spread across many departments and agencies,
many of them are just taking the money and running in their own
direction without complete coordination?
Im not trying to pin the donkeys tail on you. Im just really concerned about that and whether you were having trouble getting a
handle on that and keeping their nose to the grindstone in the direction that you have decided you should go. So Dr. Marburger first
and then Dr. Sampson.
Dr. MARBURGER. Thank you, Congressman. The Climate Change
Science Program is one of a very small number of federal interagency programs that has a fully staffed coordination office. The
chairman or the director of that office has been Dr. James
Mahoney, a
Mr. EHLERS. And he did
Dr. MARBURGER.a prominent meteorologist.
Mr. EHLERS. And he did an excellent job.
Dr. MARBURGER. And he has led that office in a very vigorous
and proactive way. And part of the function of that office is to review the climate change science programs in all the agencies every
year, to make sure that the budget proposals requested from those
agencies are consistent with the overall strategic plan, and I believe that some of the changes and motion that you see in the
budgets for those programs is a direct result of vigorous oversight
and not the result of chaotic drifting. So I would interpret the
changes that are being made as a result of dedication to operating
this program as well as possible.
The office has a system that they have adhered to of having their
progress reviewed by external bodies, including the National Academy of Sciences. So I believe there is oversight there and I would
interpret some of these changes that you referred to as not necessarily indicating weakness.
Mr. EHLERS. So youre saying this is really part of the annual review of the planning process and modification as you go along?
Dr. MARBURGER. Insofar as these changes are reflected in the
Presidents requests for these programs, they are in fact a result
of deliberate review by the coordinating office.
Chairman BOEHLERT. The gentlemans time has expired.
Mr. EHLERS. I wondered if Dr. Sampson could just
Chairman BOEHLERT. Okay. Dr. Sampson.
Dr. SAMPSON. Well, Ive chaired the Climate Change Science Program this past year. OMB sits in on those meetings. Dr. Mahoney

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is, I think, a real national treasure and so yes, I believe there is
very strong coordination among the agencies.
Mr. EHLERS. The next questionand I dont have time, but I just
want to throw it out and you can reply in writing. What about the
technology program? Is the same thing true there?
Chairman BOEHLERT. Thank you very much. Mr. Miller. Incidentally, Mr. Miller and I, just about 30 days ago, were down at the
South Pole and Im advised by our good friends in the National
Science Foundation that theyre going to initiate a new program
making us members of the Royal Order of the Ice or something like
that. But, Dr. Bement, you know what a wonderful job NSF does
with that polar program and hes got firsthand testimony. Mr. Miller, youre recognized.
Mr. MILLER. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. It was wonderful to
stand at the South Pole and realize that all the politicians of the
world who thought the world was revolving around them were actually wrong. It was revolving around me, at least for that moment.
I was also pleased when I heard the President, in his State of the
Union, describe a new competitiveness initiative, emphasis on
science and math education and emphasis on basic research, but
this is my third, or that was my fourth State of the Union and the
budget always comes a week later, and it has become apparent to
me that the budget writers get one memo and the speech writers
get a different memo. The speech writers get a memo entitled paying Paul, and the budget writes get a memo entitled robbing Peter.
I remember two years ago, and then again last year, the President praised community colleges for the important role they played
in giving our workers the skills that they need. Two years ago the
President announced a new $250 million job training program for
community colleges. When his budget came out, you couldnt really
find it. Now, Congress did fund that $250 million as a new initiative, but that year, half of that came dollar from dollar for a Displaced Workers Training Program that was doing pretty much exactly what the President said the new program was going to be
doing. And then last year Congress funded the new initiative not
at all, but the Displaced Workers Program didnt get their $125
million back. And in fact, over the last three appropriation cycles,
programs in community colleges for training displaced and new
workers have lost $120 million. So I was actually a little concerned
when I heard the President talk about basic research and what
that would actually mean in the longer run. Is praising it in the
State of the Union actually the first step in cutting it?
And Dr. Marburger, Im not persuaded by the argument that you
need to back out the earmarks and that we really are spending
more on science, not less. The earmarks were undoubtedly spent on
research, just research at the direction of Congress instead of research at the direction of the Administration. But fundamentally,
I agree that what were doing in scientific research should not be
guided by politics. But, Dr. Marburger, I am very concerned that
reports that we have heard, that it is being guided by politics in
the Administration. There was an article this morning in the
Washington Post, and op-ed piece by Ann Applebaum, about a
NASA-funded research project into the possible environmental effects of hydrogen fuel cell, the hydrogen fuel cell economy that the

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President pushed two or three years ago, and that a press conference and a press released announcing the results of that study
were killed by your office, apparently for political reasons. This was
a favored project of the Administration and this report by NASA
was critical of it.
Dr. Marburger, I know that youre going to say it didnt happen,
but these were all unnamed, presumably national employees speaking and not forspeaking with the understanding that their names
not be used. What assurances can you give us? What procedures
are in place to make sure that politics does not intrude in what is
being funded and what findings are acceptable coming out of scientific research, particularly on global warming?
Dr. MARBURGER. On the contrary, that is a case where my office
did, in fact, ask NASA to hold up a press release on a study that
indicated the impact of very large quantities of hydrogen in the atmosphere, and we did that specifically because another agency that
had expertise in this area was aware of the conditions of the report
were somewhat in question, and we wanted to make sure that the
Department of Energy had an opportunity to say what it thought
the case was before NASA put out its own press release. We did
this in full awareness that the paper was about to be published
and that the institution where the people were working was going
to have its own press release. I was struck this morning, in the oped that you referred to, by the contrast between the title of the article and the concluding sentences of that commentator saying, I
have nothing to report.
So I think this is a case where theres been an effort to make a
mountain out of molehill, and Im not at all defensive about the action that my office took in that instance. It took place three, three
and a half years ago, I believe. So Im very aware of the report and
its implications and the problems with the study that was done,
some of which were actually indicated in the op-ed article that
youre referring to. So I dont think this is an indication that supports the contention that the Administration interferes with science
or censors science in any way. I think that this was an appropriate
action that we took in response to a situation that needed to be
clarified to the American people.
Chairman BOEHLERT. Thank you very much. The gentlemans
time has expired. Mr. Calvert.
Mr. CALVERT. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Im sorry, I was meeting with Dr. Sega here in the back and I dont know if the question
that Im going to have, whether its been answered or not. If it has,
let me know. Dr. Marburger, the Office of Science and Technology
Policy, OSTP, is currently in the process of developing a national
aeronautics policy, youre probably aware of, to guide research in
years to come and the question I have, or two questions, one is,
how will this policy ensure that the United States is competitive
globally, in an industry that is one of the bright spots that we have
left? And the other question is, why was aeronautics not included
in the Presidents competitiveness initiative?
Dr. MARBURGER. Thank you, Congressman. The Presidents competitiveness initiative is an initiative about priorities. What are the
areas that have the absolute highest impact on our future competitiveness? What are the areas that need to be tuned up and need

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to be supported in response to studies that have taken place over
the past few years? And what are the areas that are ready to use
the funds that have plans in place and detailed spending plans and
projects and roadmaps and so forth? And I believe that the initiative does accurately identify those priorities.
The civil aviation component of federal operations is clearly a
very important component and one that is currently benefiting
from an activity mandated by Congress on the next generation air
transport system. As that planning for that program matures and
develops its own roadmaps and strategic plans for the path forward, I have every confidence that the President will propose and
the Congress will appropriate funds that are appropriate for that
sector of our activities.
Mr. CALVERT. I have a number of questions specifically that I
might send to you because of the limited time.
Dr. MARBURGER. Id be glad to respond.
Mr. CALVERT. I also have a question that I wont ask for an answer, that as a nation we should be concerned about is the next
generation air traffic system, which, seems to me, were falling behind on and we just dont seem to have any closure on that, and
the Europeans, as you know, with their own concept, that I would
hate for us to see us lose that, which is extremely important to
maintain, I think, an industry thats very important to this country. I would like to get a written response on that.
Dr. Bodman, you know, on the issue of energy independence
and I understand, with the price of oil being what it is, that oil
companies probablyit isnt necessary for them to possibly get
R&D money for oil sand research or oil shale research, but it seems
to me that we need to do something thats immediate in order to
get our supply up and in order for us to be competitive and to have
better prices at the pump, quite frankly. And I know your ethanol
initiatives and whats going on with finding better technologies and
to use cheaper fuel stocks and the rest. Any comment about how
we can help get more oil in the pipeline and have more immediacy
in some of these solutions that we can go back home and talk to
folks about? Because Ill tell you, in southern California, and Im
sure Danas the same way, we hear a lot about that back home.
Secretary BODMAN. The efforts on drilling continue unabated.
There is plenty of incentive to drill oil wells at $60 oil prices. And
so we have seen a response. Part of the problem in looking at energy, at the energy system, the country has, the world is getting
your constituents to appreciate the scale. We had a situation where
starting a year ago, we had, right after I took this job, by the way,
we had, for the first time in my memory, demonstrated the inability of the world producers to keep up with the demand and so we
saw an escalating oil price. It started there; it was exacerbated by
the hurricanes that occurred last fall. And Im of the belief that we
will see a response from the industry as they are getting geared up
and working on the appropriate expansion of their activities. Certainly, thats happening abroad and I believe that its also happening domestically.
We also have, you know, other things that have been real problems getting the natural gas pipeline from Alaska constructed. Part
of the responsibility, at least at this point, of the Energy Depart-

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ment getting that going and its been a real issue trying to get the
oil and gas companies to agree to the demands of the State government in Alaska, or vice versa. Im not sure whos at fault, but weve
got real issues there in trying to get that done, and then you are
well aware of ANWR and the situation that emanates from there.
So there are lots of ways. The Interior Department has proposals
on increasing access to parts of the outer continental shelf in the
Gulf of Mexico; that will help. And I know that Secretary Norton
is working hard on expanding or accelerating the processing of applications for drilling federal land, so there are a lot of things that
we can do and we are doing our best to try to deal with it and at
the same time implementing the Energy Bill, which is basically
looking for alternative sources.
Chairman BOEHLERT. Thank you very much. The gentlemans
time has expired. Chair recognizes, for brief intervention, Chairman Biggert because she has a compelling need to be someplace
else. She just gave me a little note, she said this is the most important hearing so far this year and I agree with her, but shes got
another commitment thats equally important to her personal
schedule, not to the Nation. Chairman Biggert.
Ms. BIGGERT. Thank you. I think not only the most important
this year, so far, because I dont think weve had very many or any,
but I think it is the most important hearing that were going to
have this year. I am just so excited about whats happened here
and how the Presidents American Competitiveness Initiative and
the prominent role that DOEs Office of Science will play in this visionary initiative and I really think that much of this credit for the
high priority that this budget places on science is due to you, Dr.
Bodman.
It balances researchers and facilities, it capitalizes on our investment in user facilities by maximizing their operations and it makes
strategic investments to maintain U.S. dominance in material
sciences, nanotechnology, biotechnology and high-speed computing
and I havent even mentioned the Global Nuclear Energy Partnership, which I strongly support. I had to be at another hearing earlier and I asked the questions of the new Federal Reserve Chairman Bernanke, who is testifying before Congress, its the first time,
and he reiterated the importance of R&D to this U.S. economy and
U.S. competitiveness and he also endorsed one of the key components of the Presidents competitiveness initiatives, namely to
make permanent the R&D tax credits, so the importance of researchbut all of you have been working so hard on this that I
you know, I wish that I had had more time to be here, but Ibut
you know how much I appreciate what all of you have done, and
Dr. Marburger, with working on this tirelessly, too, but Secretary
Bodman, youve just, you know, been outstanding, I think, where
we are really in a new revolution.
We have moved, you know, agriculture, industrial, manufacturingwe are in the high-tech era right now and I thinkI dont
know that we realize the place in history that this is going to be
and I think we need to continue, you know, to develop this initiative and were, all of us, I think, as the Congress, as the Administration, to really fulfill this and bring forward a really new economic era that were going to see, so I thank you all for being here.

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Chairman BOEHLERT. Thank you very much, and I cant help but
be reminded it was technology and our wise investments that drove
the dynamic 1990s and we soared to new heights and its going to
be technology that guarantees an even more promising future. And
when I think of a more promising future, I think of Mr. Honda. The
Chair recognizes you for five minutes, sir.
Mr. HONDA. Thank you, Mr. Chairman, and youre a silvertongued devil. Youre not a devil. But Im pleased to be here and
I also have a couple of questions and quite frankly, Im not as enamored with what I heard from the State of the Union because Ive
been here six years and theres a difference between saying something and then following through with substantive kinds of programs that theyre putting the money behind it. Im reminded of
the movie Jerry Maguire, where the football player said show me
the money and Im not quite sure that the moneys going to be coming here. I have a question for Dr. Sampson, but a comment to the
Secretaryto Secretary Bodman, and thats a comment about our
inaction between the DOE and this committee.
Ranking Member Gordon submitted a series of questions to you
in advance of this hearing so that you could be prepared to submit
answers to those questions at this hearing, but from what Ive been
told, those answers were not available today because theyre awaiting OMB approval. The problem I have with this is that I think
I am still waiting for answers to questions I submitted at a hearing
back in June on reprocessing. We only have a little bit of time to
ask questions verbally, so Id like a response offline afterwards, but
it just seems that you wont be answering questions when we submit after the hearings and not responding to questions when
theyre submitted before our hearings and so if theres a problem
with the OMB clearance, how long before the hearing do we need
to give you questions so that answers can be cleared? Ill come back
later for that response after this hearing, perhaps later.
Dr. Sampson, its time for my annual question about Advanced
Technology Program, ATP. The documents that came with the
budget say that the program isnt needed due to the growth of
venture capital and other financing sources. Red Herring magazine published this recently based on data from their national venture capital association which has an interest in making VCs look
good. According to the story, while VCs raised a lot more money
in 2005, total VC investments only went up about two percent in
2005, from 2004. The biggest gains went to retailers and consumer
services, meanwhile the semiconductor, pharmaceuticals, electronics and software all secured less funding in 2005 than in 2004,
and during 2005, VCs cut their seed funding by 54 percent from
the 2004 level, from $118.3 million down to $54.3 million. Based on
the data, how can you possibly say that ATP isnt needed because
ample VC funding is available? It appears that MEP is following
the same route as ATP as far as our process is concerned and were
all concerned about MEP, as we were with ATP, and some comments were made about earmarks. It appears to me that ATPs
only being funded through our good efforts, through our earmark
process and thats the only way ATP seems to be surviving. So Id
like some sort of response to that comment.

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Dr. SAMPSON. Well, let me respond to the ATP issue, first of all,
in several ways. First of all, the budget that we submitted reflect
what we believe are the highest priorities. Secondly
Mr. HONDA. Well, its been submitted as zero, I believe, if Im not
mistaken.
Dr. SAMPSON. Thats what Im getting to.
Mr. HONDA. Okay, so its a high priority and itsIm sorry, go
ahead.
Dr. SAMPSON. No. We have redirected that money in what we believe to be higher priority areas, which is the core mission of National Institute of Standards and Technology, which is basic research in the physical sciences and secondly, I think that without
question, the United States has the most robust venture capital
market anywhere in the world. The evidence of that is clearly demonstrated around the country, whether youre going to the 128 Corridor in Boston or Silicon Valley or other emerging innovation
hotspots around the country and so
Mr. HONDA. Perhaps you can share your stats with our office to
substantiate your position because the article that I read in the
Red Herring magazine has done some research in terms of funding,
so go ahead. Thank you. If you could produce that.
Dr. SAMPSON. Well be happy to get back with you.
Mr. HONDA. Yes, do you have a timeline for that?
Dr. SAMPSON. As soon as our staff can work on it, well be happy
to get back to you.
Mr. HONDA. Ive been waiting since June for the questions on reprocessing. Its about responsiveness.
Dr. SAMPSON. I cant answer that.
Secretary BODMAN. I am very puzzled by that and it will have
my immediate attention when I get back to the extent that you
sent a letter several months ago and have not been responded to,
sir, I am unaware of it and
Mr. HONDA. Well, the Ranking Member also has done that, too,
so
Secretary BODMAN. I know the Ranking Member sent material,
sent that list of questions in, answers have been prepared, they are
being processed through OMB and they will be forthcoming
promptly. I was prepared to deal with his questions at this meeting
if he wanted to ask questions at this meeting.
Mr. HONDA. I asked because
Secretary BODMAN. But in terms of your situation, sir, I am completely unaware of it and it is exactly the sort of thing that I have
been working hard to bring a halt to, to the extent that these
issues existed and I will see to it promptly.
Mr. HONDA. Id appreciate it.
Secretary BODMAN. You will have an answer, sir.
Mr. HONDA. Thank you very much and please forgive my
adamancy.
Secretary BODMAN. Perfectly reasonable question.
Mr. HALL. [Presiding] Thanks, Gentleman. The Chair recognizes
the gentleman from Minnesota, Mr. Gutknecht.
Mr. GUTKNECHT. Thank you, Mr. Chairman, and I hope I dont
take the whole five minutes, but I probably, unfortunately, will.
First of all, let me apologize on behalf of a lot of my colleagues for

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these earmarks because I do believe that frankly, I think theyre
inappropriate in terms of science and research and I am a proud
original cosponsor of Representative Jeff Flakes bill and hopefully,
now more Members will join us in that. Let me say, though, on behalf, I think, of the overwhelming majority of Members of this committee, for the most part, we have avoided the temptations that
other committees have fallen into in terms of those earmarks.
What I really want to talk about, though, just briefly with you,
and Im delighted, Secretary Bodman, were delighted to have you
here to talk a little bit about renewable energy, because I think you
made a very important point. At $60 a barrel, Im not sure how
much we really need to subsidize a lot of that. But I want to come
back toone of my favorite expressions is that success leaves clues,
and I think if theres one successful program in terms of advancing
research that we have seen, at least on this committee and that
weve worked with, its one thats run by the Defense Department,
its called DARPA, and Im wondering if any of you and particularly, Secretary Bodman, if you want to talk briefly about that, how
much you know about DARPA and whether or not you have considered a similar type program in any of the other agencies.
And the reason I say that is in our work, both on this committee
and in my work representing the people of southern Minnesota, I
get to encounter a number of incredibly interesting ideas and entrepreneurs, and one of them I actually took out to the National
Renewable Energy Labs out in Colorado, which is a very impressive facility. But on the way back he said something rather interesting; he said, you know, actually what were doing right now is
probably more advanced than what theyre doing out in Colorado
and I said why is it that it seems that private individuals, entrepreneurs and inventors seem to be able to move at a faster rate
sometimes than the federal agencies and he gave a very interesting
answer.
He said because we only eat what we kill, and if you think about
it, thats why I really want to encourage you all to consider looking
at that DARPA model because, you know, a few dollars invested,
relatively small amounts of money invested in specialty projects
have yielded enormous returns in terms of new ideas, new innovations. When you look at the success rate of DARPA, I think its one
that deserves to be studied and wherever possible, modeled. And
Secretary Bodman, if you want to respond to that, or anybody else,
Id appreciate it.
Secretary BODMAN. I am very aware of DARPA and its predecessor, which was the Office of Naval Research, and that goes back
to my days as a student, sir, so I am quite aware of what theyve
accomplished. The budget that is before you shows sizeable increases in funding for research in the Energy Department. I commented earlier, I believe before you arrived, that we are thrilled
with the proposal thats there and we are very hopeful. There are
a number of proposals in Congress, some of them involving a
DARPA-like structure, and my answer on that is I am aware of it.
We have a lot to do and we have a 14 percent increase. We have
a half billion dollars to put to work in the science area. We have
a quarter billion dollars to put to work in additional funds in the
energy area and they had been prioritized and we worked on that,

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and so Im sure there are things that, in the DARPA model that
make sense and we would be happy to explore that and work with
you if thats something youre interested in. I just would observe,
we have a lot to do to take the money that hopefully, will be granted by Congress and put it to work effectively. We have a big job
and I would rather not distract this Department with additional
priorities, at least right now. Hopefully, after we get this started
and are more effective in operating in this sort of environment, we
will be able to be more responsive to your suggestions and other
suggestions about a DARPA program.
Mr. HALL. Gentlemans time is expired. The Chair recognizes the
gentleman from Missouri, Mr. Carnahan.
Mr. CARNAHAN. Thank you, Mr. Chairman, and Im glad to see
us having this discussion here today. This is a big idea and I think
its a big deal for our country. Weve had great bipartisan support
with a lot of these initiatives and as they say, the old saying, politics makes strange bedfellows, and Im going to talk about Bono
and JFK in the same paragraph here, now. Bono was here in
Washington a few weeks ago and talked about the dangers of
incrementalism when you have big ideas. I think thats important
to keep in mind. And you look at the example of JFK, and Secretary Bodman, you talked about those times when you really created this national challenge for us and I think we need to have
that same great level of national challenge with where we are
today.
But I think this big idea deserves a lot more than fuzzy math
or counterproductive measures and Im concerned about if were
just cutting science in some areas to fund science in other areas,
were really just reshuffling the chairs on the Titanic. We deserve
better than that. And I want to make a point about Congressional
earmarks; does anyone on the panel think that Congressionally
earmarked dollars spends differently than an administration budgeted item?
Dr. MARBURGER. Yes, I do.
Mr. CARNAHAN. Id be curious to know how.
Dr. MARBURGER. Yes, sir. The fact is that the Presidential requests are built on proposals from agencies that are developed in
consultation with external committees of scientists and educators
and engineers and they are part of a coherent plan. In many cases,
earmarks are spent on activities that lie completely outside coherent plans and not infrequently, are completely outside the area of
R&D for which the agencies are supposed to be responsible.
So I believe that the best possible way to spend taxpayer dollars
in research is in consultation with the agencies that are responsible
for providing oversight and their peer review merit based mechanisms. So we would be glad to work with Congress to determine
mechanisms that would make it possible for Congressional concerns to be addressed in the areas of research that appear to be
needed, but I think this practice of earmarking has grown out of
control and were very concerned about it.
Dr. SAMPSON. With respect to the Commerce Department, the
majority of our funds and our construction account for the NIST
laboratories are earmarked funds for activities that are not a part
of NISTs core mission. All of this, at the time, when our lab in

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Boulder, Coloradowe have Nobel Prize winning scientists doing
work in labs where they have black plastic sheeting covering the
roof and cardboard placed on ventilation systems to be able to try
to control the temperature and the moisture in the room. I know
Dr. Bodman has been there to see those facilities and so I think
has Dr. Bement, whoformer Director of NIST. And so the issue
for us is theres money in the budget, but can it be spent on the
priorities that we have to facilitate core basic research?
Secretary BODMAN. One of the big issues in the Energy Department is the production of ethanol using various biologically-based
systems, goes out of the NREL out in Colorado and 57 percent of
that budget has been earmarked, sir, and that has meant that
weve had to lay off people at the NREL laboratory which we got
criticized for and it was a direct result of Congressionally mandated programs that were not related to that which we wished to
do.
Mr. CARNAHAN. Well, I would acknowledge that we may have a
difference in the vetting process, but I think the vast majority of
earmarks that have come through the Congress have been thought
out and have been part of an important part of what we do here.
Finally, I want to closeI talked about some counter-productive
policies. Im concerned about the K through 12 cuts. Im concerned
about the measures that have just passed through the Congress
that have made historic cuts in the student loan programs. Weve
had several panels of distinguished business executives from
around the country expressing concern about our education policy
and I think we cannot succeed in this innovation initiative if we
dont really take a hard look at our education policy in growing
those young minds to meet the need, otherwise were going to see
the scientists and engineers from China and India and around the
world being used to fill that gap, and Id like to have some comment about that.
Dr. MARBURGER. I couldnt agree more. I believe that education
is absolutely a high priority investment for this nation. Quality of
teaching, the quality of experience that young people have in classroom and the standards to which we hold their performance are all
important and they are all features of the American Competitiveness Initiative that the President announced and I hope that in
further hearings and as people have the opportunity to speak about
them, we can learn about plans for those areas, but the President
is very concerned about the quality of education in this country and
is looking for handles on it and ways to bring about improvements
that we know are needed for continued American leadership in
high technology.
Chairman BOEHLERT. Thank you. Gentlemans time
Mr. CARNAHAN. Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
Chairman BOEHLERT. Gentlemans time has expired. I recognize,
out of order for one minute, Dr. Ehlers because he has something
pertinent to the discussion at hand.
Mr. EHLERS. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Im surprised to hear
earmarks defended twice by the minority party. I want to give another example where, in a budget some years ago, because of the
sorry state of the NIST laboratories in Boulder, we put in $40 million to help them prevent rainwater from falling on the worlds best

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time standard, for example. Out of that $40 million, in the Senate,
all $40 million was diverted to the causeits the one that comes
to mind immediately, was $10 million to build a law library in a
college in the state from which that senator came. No correlation
whatsoever with the original intent of that money and certainly not
of general benefit to the Nation, as a whole. And that sort of behavior, that sort of process simply has to stop and I agree with the
panel on that. Thank you very much.
Mr. SHERMAN. Mr. Chairman, if I could speak for 30 seconds out
of turn?
Chairman BOEHLERT. All right, fair is fair. The gentleman is recognized for up to one minute, equal time.
Mr. SHERMAN. Clearly, there have been stupid earmarks or earmarks that are outside of good scientific policy, but I trust you,
gentlemen, there are stupid decisions made by the Administration
and to hear, in this room, it said that all the Administration earmarks made to de-fund this or that policy are results of an open
process, are part of a logical plan, are intelligent decisions make in
the interest of the American people and that those decisions made
by Congress as to how to spend money are inherently flawed, not
part of an open process, is, I think, insulting to the Congress. We
make decisions, the Administration makes decisions, both make
wise decisions, both make stupid decisions and to say that when
Congress decides that a certain amount of money should be spent
on a certain project, that that is interference, is really a declaration
that Congress is an annoying interference in the Federal Government. I yield back.
Chairman BOEHLERT. Thank the gentleman for that intervention.
Now the Chair is pleased to recognize the distinguished gentleman
from California, Mr. Rohrabacher.
Mr. ROHRABACHER. Well, I will remind my friend fromand colleague from Missouri that cutting one program thats already in
place and transferring the money to another program could well be
the sign of prioritizing money so that its going into programs that
tend to work and out of programs that do not work. So its not necessarily a bad sign that the Administration is trying to prioritize
the spending that we do and transferring some money from programs that may be less effective, so that may be a plus. That may
be something that the Administrations doing that deserves to be
applauded and I would just like to say that I dont know whose decision making is more flawed. Ive worked in the Executive Branch
and the Legislative Branch.
I will just say that it is clear that there are certain political motivations that happen here in Congress that we should recognize before we throw rocks at the Administration. With that said, earlier
on in the hearing we heard about how to get bright people, young
people involved in science. I dont understand why the obvious is
not ever mentioned and that is pay them more money. Why do people go into law? Because the lawyers have all of the fancy sports
cars and live in the big homes, and if a kid who is very smart has
to choose between driving in a jalopy and being a Ph.D. in physics
versus going into law and living in a big mansion and having the
good looking girlfriend, guess what hes going to choose?

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So with that, that goes all the way back down, by the way, to
education where we pay physical education instructors the same
amount of money that we pay people to teach our young people
science and math and engineering and every study that Ive seen
shows its between fourth grade and ninth grade where were losing
the battle with our young people, yet in those middle schools we
are unable, due to some political considerations, I might add, by
some very strong unions, not to differentiate in pay between those
people who can teach our kids the basics of math and science at
that level and versus paying the same amount of money as you do
for history or social sciences or physical education or dance class
or basket weaving. This is ridiculous. So we need some reform in
that area and making money is also something that will encourage
people to get into the math and sciences when theyre older.
I mean, we havent heard anybody talk about royalties from patents or the protection of patents or the fact that people who are
creative, how they get ripped off so often of their own creative instincts and their own in creating projects by big companies that are
able to violate patent rights. Strengthening patent rights is a way
to make sure America stays ahead and get people involved in the
sciences. I, for example, believe that we should eliminate the taxes,
if not, at least have some sort of tax advantage for people who are
making their income on royalties from patents.
With that said, I would like to make one last point and that is
well, first of all, I applaud the Administration for making it a scientific and engineering priority for America to become energy selfsufficient by 2025. Thats a bold, bold stroke by the President and
I will be anxiousin fact, Dr. Marburger, if youd come in to my
office to have a discussion on that with some viable technologies
right after this hearing, but I look forward to working with each
and every one of you to achieve that goal. But lets make sure,
when we talk about research, money and research, that were
doing, that when we put money in one end of the system that what
comes out of the other end of the system is something of benefit
to the people of the United States of America and uplifts the condition of humanity.
I am dismayed, and here again, Im sorry, Mr. Chairman, that
Ill have to be the skunk at the lawn party, so to speak, again, but
I am dismayed to see that we are spending $1.7 billion on global
warming research after billions and billions and billions and billions of dollars have already been spent trying to promote this idea
versus $1.3 billion on nanotechnology, which I understand has tremendous potential of changing the human condition for the better.
Let me note, for the record, at this point, Mr. Chairman, I would
like to submit the names of thousands of scientists and other experts within the scientific community who are skeptical of global
warming and Id like to place it in the record at this point, in the
record.
Chairman BOEHLERT. Without objection, so ordered.
[The information follows:]

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GLOBAL WARMING PETITION
(http://www.oism.org/pproject/s33p37.htm, February 24, 2006)
We urge the United States Government to reject the global warming agreement
that was written in Kyoto, Japan in December, 1997, and any other similar proposals. The proposed limits on greenhouse gases would harm the environment,
hinder the advance of science and technology, and damage the health and welfare
of mankind.
There is no convincing scientific evidence that human release of carbon dioxide,
methane, or other greenhouse gasses is causing or will, in the foreseeable future,
cause catastrophic heating of the Earths atmosphere and disruption of the Earths
climate. Moreover, there is substantial scientific evidence that increases in atmospheric carbon dioxide produce many beneficial effects upon the natural plant and
animal environments of the Earth.
2660 Physicists, Geophysicists, Climatologists, Meteorologists, Oceanographers, and Environmental Scientists Signers
(http://www.oism.org/pproject/asci.htm, February 24, 2006)
Category: A
Philip H Abelson, PhD, Gene Ackerman, Robert K Adair, PhD, John A Adam,
PhD, Daniel B Adams Jr, Gail D Adams, PhD, Leonard C A Adams, PhD, Louis W
Adams, PhD, Neil Adams, PhD, William M Adams, PhD, George Adcock, Lionel P
Adda, PhD, Harry Adrounie, PhD, Stephen Affleck, PhD, Phillip Ahlberg, Mark
Ahlert, Rafique Ahmed, PhD, S Aisenberg, PhD, Edward Albert, James C Albright,
PhD, Allwyn Albuquerque, Ernest C Alcaraz, PhD, Ronald G Alderfer, PhD, Perry
B Alers, PhD, John C Alexander, Moorad Alexanian, PhD, Roger C Alig, PhD, Clayton H Allen, PhD, David Allen, PhD, James Allen, PhD, Mike R Allen, PhD, Thomas
H Allen, PhD, William Allen, John J Allport, PhD, Vincent O Altemose, Melvyn R
Altman, PhD, Edward E Altshuler, PhD, Charles D Amata, PhD, Edward J Ames
III, Pierre Saiut-Amond, PhD, Arthur G Anderson, PhD, Berard J Anderson, PhD,
James R Anderson, James R Anderson, Ken Anderson, Orson L Anderson, PhD, P
Jennings Anderson, Richard A Anderson, PhD, Richard C Anderson, Tom Anderson,
Douglas Andress, James F Andrew, PhD, Bradley C Anthanaitis, PhD, Lee S Anthony, PhD, Lynn Apple, PhD, Alan Appleby, PhD, Herbert S Appleman, Morris H
Aprison, PhD, Richard E Apuzzo Jr, Philip Archibald, Robert Archibald, John Archie, William Bryant Ard, PhD, Harold V Argo, PhD, Baxter H Armstrong, PhD,
Robert Emile Arnal, PhD, Charles Arney, Casper J Aronson, Jose J D Arruda, PhD,
James Arthur, PhD, Max Artusy, PhD, Edward V Ashburn, Randolph Ashby, PhD,
Jerome P Ashman, Monroe Ashworth, Orv Askeland, Ronald Attig, Leonardo D
Attorre, Luther Aull, PhD, John B Aultmann Jr, William Avera, Frank Averill, PhD,
Kenneth Avicola, M Friedman Axler, William Aylor.
Category: B
Lloyal O Bacon, Adrian D Baer, PhD, Lester Marchant Baggett, PhD, Dane E Bailey, Edward J Bair, PhD, Quincey L Baird, PhD, DK Baker, PhD, Gary Baker, Lara
H Baker, PhD, Randal S Baker, W Loyd Balderson, PhD, W Lloyd Balderston, PhD,
David Baldwin, Evart Baldwin, PhD, Sallie Baliunas, PhD, George Ball, David W
Ballard, Glenn A Ballard, Harold N Ballard, Arthur Ballato, PhD, Robert Balling,
PhD, Tom Ballou Jr, Robert C Balsam Jr, Daniel W Bancroft, George P Bancroft,
Herman Wm Bandel, PhD, Tom Bane, Richard Banks, Peter R Bannister, John Paul
Barach, PhD, Paul Barbieri, Andrew M Bardos, Steven Bardwell, PhD, Robert
Barish, PhD, Francis J Barker, Douglas D Barman, Durton B Barnes, Christopher
M Barrett, James Barrick, PhD, Cory W Barron, Lawrence J Barrows, PhD, John
Bartel, PhD, Carol J Bartnick, PhD, Samuel Batdorf, PhD, James L Bateman,
Charles C Bates, PhD, Charles C Bates, PhD, Earl Bates, Terry E Batlalino, Kevin
Batt, Kirk Battleson, PhD, Michael H Bauer Jr, Norman P Baumann, PhD, Max
Baumeister, A Z Baumgartner, Eric Baumgartner, John G Bayless, Jack W Beal,
PhD, Edward W Beall, James M Beall, Terry W. Beall, Donald Beasley, PhD, William Beaton, Richard Becherer, PhD, Donald Beck, Gordon E Becker, PhD, Milton
Becker, PhD, Kenneth L Bedford, PhD, Brian Beecken, PhD, Kenneth Beeney, Edward Lee Beeson, Jr, PhD, Herbert Ernest Behrens, James M Bell, John Bell, PhD,
John C Bellamy, PhD, Thomas E Bellinger, Randy Belstad, Rettig Benedict, PhD,
Ray Benge, James A Benjamin, PhD, Charles Bennett, Alvin K Benson, PhD, John
A Berberet, PhD, Jay M Berger, PhD, Lev Berger, PhD, Ernest Bergman, Dick
Bergren, PhD, Mike Bergsmg, Robt Beringer, PhD, Brian Berman, Marshall Berman, PhD, Andre Bernier, Warren W Berning, Edwin Berry, PhD, Edwin Berry,

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PhD, Herbert W Berry, PhD, John R Berryhill, PhD, Robert Bessette, Albert J
Bevolo, PhD, John H Beyer, PhD, Swapan Bhattacharjee, PhD, Kenneth L Del
Bianco, Conrad Biber, PhD, Hans Bichsel, PhD, William S Bickel, PhD, Karin Bickford, Jean M Bidlace, PhD, Charles Bieber, J Bierman, Doug N Biewitt, Rodney E
Bigler, PhD, John D Shaylor-Billings, George E Billman, PhD, Billones, D G Bills,
PhD, Edward G Bilpuch, PhD, Charles F Bird, E F Birdsall, PhD, Seymour Bristein,
Burt J Bittner, Sammy M Black, Lloyd Blackburn, M L Blackwell, Bruce A Blake,
George R Blake, PhD, Philip J Blank, PhD, Barbara Blass, PhD, Joel J Blatt, PhD,
Henry H Blau, PhD, Stephen Blaylock, Carl Bleil, PhD, John Blethen, PhD, James
W Blue, PhD, M D Blue, PhD, G Bluzas, G W Elvernum, Frank T Bodurtha, PhD,
Hollis Boehme, PhD, Steven A Boggs, PhD, Kees Boi, PhD, Art F Boland, M S
Boley, PhD, Mark S Boley, Gerald L Bolingbroke, PhD, Eugene Bollay, Bruce
Bollermann, J R Bone, John Franklin Bonner, PhD, Jane M Booker, PhD, Bruce L
Booth, PhD, Robt M Booth, John W Boring, PhD, Annette H Borkowski, Harold J
Born, PhD, Paul N Bossart, John N Botkin, CJF Bottcher, PhD, Robert H Bourke,
PhD, Mohamed Boutjdir, PhD, Joseph C Bowe, PhD, Robert C Bowers, Sidney A
Bowhill, PhD, Robert M Bowie, PhD, Norman Bowne, Colin Bowness, PhD, David
Boyce, Wilson E Boyce, Robert Boyd III, Robert A Boyer, PhD, David Brackney,
Dorothy L Bradbury, Joseph U Braddock, PhD, Alan D Brailsford, PhD, Eric M
Bram, Emanuel L Brancato, Ross E Brannian, James P Brazel, Theodore Breaux,
Reginald Breeding, Bertram V Breemen, Sydney Breese, Martin Bregman, PhD,
Brian O Brien, Corale L Brierley, PhD, Edwin C Brinker, Sue Broadston, George
Brock, Ivor Brodie, PhD, David A Bromley, PhD, John Bronstein, PhD, Mark
Bronston, PhD, Walter Brouillette, PhD, J Brower, Glenn Brown, PhD, Hal W
Brown, J Paul Brown, Jerry W Brown, PhD, John Brown, John M Brown, PhD,
Raymond E Brown, Walter R J Brown, Cornelius P Browne, PhD, D Brownell,
Charles R Bruce, PhD, George H Bruce, Robert Brueck, Col Wm Bruenner, John
Bruno, PhD, David A Bryan, PhD, Howard Bryan, Barry W Bryant, PhD, Charles
Bryson, John Buckinger, Gary L Buckwalter, PhD, J Fred Bucy, PhD, Wallace D
Budge, PhD, Brent J Buescher, PhD, Charles R Buffler, PhD, William Bullis, PhD,
Stephen Bundy, Merle Bunker, PhD, James H Burbo, Donald F Burchfield, PhD,
Brian Burges, John C Burgeson, Edward W Burke, PhD, Ned Burleson, PhD, Victor
W Burns, PhD, Joe Burroughs, William Burrows, PhD, Philip B Burt, PhD, James
Robert Burwell, PhD, Richard S Burwen, Gary D Buser, Robert Bushnell, PhD, Robert Busing, Duane J Buss, PhD, Stanley E Buss, Scott E Butler, PhD, P Edward
Byerly, PhD, William M. Byrne, PhD.
Category: C
Fernando Cadena, PhD, C Cadenhead, PhD, Anthony P Cadrioli, Dennis Cahill,
Stephen R Cain, PhD, Richard E Cale, Dixon Callihan, PhD, Christopher P Cameron, PhD, John R Cameron, PhD, Nicholas A Campagna, Jr, John S Campbell,
Robert E Campbell, Antonio M Campero, PhD, Frederick P Carlson, PhD, Garry
Carlson, George Carlson, PhD, J David Carlson, PhD, Arthur Carpenito, Arthur
Carpenito, Benjamin H Carpenter, PhD, Bruce N Carpenter, Jack W Carpenter,
PhD, Jerome B Carr, PhD, Lester E Carr III, PhD, Edward Carriere, PhD, Marshall
F Cartledge, Louis M Caruana, John G Carver, PhD, Charles Case, Phillip M
Caserotti, Edward Cassidy, John G Castle, PhD, Dominic Anthony Cataldo, PhD,
Frank P Catena, Jim Caton, David Cattell, PhD, Chaels Causey, Michael
Cavanaugh, Carl N Cederstrand, PhD, Chris Cellucci, PhD, John F. Chadbourne,
PhD, Charles Chamberlain, PhD, Samuel Z Chamberlain, Paul Chamberlin, Charles
M Chambers, PhD, Kenneth Champion, PhD, Chun K Chan, PhD, Ronald R
Chance, PhD, Charles H Chandler, Berken Chang, PhD, Stanley Changnon, Jr,
Daniel W Chapman, Stanley Charap, PhD, Paul S Check, Kun Hua Chen, PhD,
Genady Cherepanov, PhD, Jimmie L Cherry, PhD, Benjamin F Cheydleur, Hong
Chin, PhD, Craig Chismarick, Edward Choulnard, PhD, Tai-Low Chow, PhD, Robt
L Christensen, PhD, Ron V Christensen, Donald O Christy, PhD, Ryan A Chrysler,
Eugene L Church, PhD, Steven R Church, PhD, Petr Chylek, PhD, Deborah M
Ciombor, PhD, A Cisar, Richard Clapp, Bill P Clark, PhD, Donald L Clark, PhD,
Grady Clark, PhD, John Clark, Kimball Clark, PhD, Richard A Clark, Richard T
Clark, James R Clarke, John Clarke, Calvin Miller Class, PhD, John F Clauser,
PhD, John W Clayton, PhD, Stan G Clayton, John C Clegg, PhD, Thomas L Cloer
Jr, Todd Cloninger, David M Close, PhD, Ray William Clough, PhD, Michael R Clover, PhD, Howard Cobb, Fritz Coester, PhD, Michael Coffey, Allen Cogbill, PhD,
Theodore Cogut, Allan H Cohen, PhD, Arnold Cohen, PhD, Howard J Cohen, PhD,
Richard M Cohen, PhD, Charles Erwin Cohn, PhD, Stefan Colban, Lawrence E
Coldren, Christopher J Cole, George R Cole, PhD, Henry B Cole, Lee A Cole, PhD,
Stephen Cole, PhD, Forrest Donald Colegrove, PhD, Anthony J Colella, Roberto
Colella, PhD, Paul Coleman, PhD, Jeffrey M Collar, Clifford B Collins, Dennis Col-

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lins, PhD, Edward Collins, PhD, Gary Collins, PhD, George Collins, Stephen L Collins, Don J Colton, Robert Comizzoli, PhD, George T Condo, PhD, John P Conigilo,
Martin E Coniglio, Ralph D. Conlon, James R Connell, John J Connelly, PhD, T
Donnelly, PhD, John I Connolly Jr, PhD, Douglas H Cook, James H Cook, Karl
Cook, Mr Vernon O Cook, Thomas B Cook Jr, PhD, David Coolbaugh, PhD, Gordon
Cooper, PhD, John C Cooper, Max E Cooper, Raymond Cooper, PhD, David F Cope,
PhD, Wm S Corak, PhD, M Yavuz Corapcioglu, PhD, Eugene F Corcoran, PhD,
Francis M Cordell, PhD, Patrick Core, John S Cornett, Robert L Corey, PhD, Henry
E Corke, PhD, John Cornell, S D Cornell, PhD, John S Cornett, Charles E Corry,
PhD, Michael Coryn, Nationwide Envro Svcs, Rebecca B Costello, PhD, John
Costlow, PhD, William R Cotton, PhD, Marcus L Countiss, Arnold Court, PhD, Arnold Court, PhD, Francis E Courtney, Jr, Carl Cowan, John D Cowlishaw, PhD,
Jack D Cox, Morgan Cox, Robert P Cox, Aaron S Coyan, Cecil I Craft, Kenneth B
Craib, James Craig, PhD, John A Cramer, PhD, Walter Crandall, PhD, Robt S
Craxton, PhD, Valerie Voss Crenshaw, Kenneth S Cressman, John Edwin Crew,
PhD, Gregory A Crews, Robert W Cribbs, Peter A Crisi, Thomas B Criss, PhD,
George T Croft, PhD, Donald C Cronemeyer, PhD, Kevin P Cross, Stephen Crouse,
Michael Cruickshank, PhD, Duane Crum, PhD, Glenn H Crumb, PhD, Gabriel T
Csanady, PhD, Alan L Csontos, Jerry F Cuderman, PhD, Donald Cudmore, Walter
Cunningham, PhD, John T Curran, Bendit Cushman-Roisin, PhD, Leonard Cutler,
PhD, Jerry Cuttler, PhD, George B Cvijanovich, PhD, Burt L St Cyr, Walter J
Czagas, Rita Czek.
Category: D
John Dabbs, PhD, George C Dacey, PhD, Calvin Daetwyler, PhD, W V Dailey,
James T Dakin, PhD, Snezana Kili-Dalafave, PhD, Anthony A Dale, George F
Dalrymple, Michael Daly, Richard Aasen Damerow, PhD, Dwight H Damon, PhD,
Jerome Samuel Danburg, PhD, Richard M Dangelo, Charles D Daniel, PhD, Anders
P Daniels, PhD, Fred Darady, Rodney C Darrah, Michael J Darre, PhD, Edward
Daskam, Clarence T Daub, PhD, Don Davidson, James M Davidson, PhD, Chad Davies, PhD, Edward J Davies, PhD, Emlyn B Davies, PhD, Frank W Davies, Brian
D Davis, D K Davis, Dana E Davis, Dick Davis, PhD, Francis Davis, PhD, Fred
Davis, Jesse L Davis, M Davis, PhD, Wm R Davis, PhD, HR Dawson, PhD, Tom
Dawson, Duke Dayton, David Deacon, PhD, Robert E Dean, William D Dean, Bobby
C Deaton, PhD, B D Debaryshe, Peter Debrunner, PhD, Robert J Debs, PhD,
Arthuir J Decker, PhD, Fred W Decker, PhD, Fred W Decker, PhD, William M
Decker, W Edward Deeds, PhD, Erwin Delano, PhD, J M Delano, J W Delano, PhD,
David C Demartini, PhD, Gerald Demers, Louis J Denes, PhD, David R Denley,
PhD, Warren W Denner, PhD, William J Denney, Ronald W Dennison, Wm Davis
Derbyshire, PhD, David Derenzo, Dimitris Dermatas, PhD, Larry Derscheid, Don
Desborough, Armand Desmarais, Herbert C Dessaver, PhD, William Devereux, Roland Dewit, PhD, F D Dexter, Franklin D Dexter, Seshasayi Dharmavaram, PhD,
Paul J Dial, Rudolph John Dichtl, Charles Edward Dickerman, PhD, Lee G Dickinson, John Dickmann, Howard Dickson, Robert B Dillaway, PhD, Malcolm Dillon,
Michael Dion, Eugene Dirk, PhD, James Disiena, H Marshall Dixon, PhD, Richard
W Dixon, PhD, Ross J Dixon, Marvin Dodge, PhD, Edward M Dokoozian, PhD, Richard Dolecek, Edward E O Donnell, PhD, Mark C Dooley, Robt F Doolittle, PhD, Billie Dopstauf, Jerome P Dorlac, Robert W Doty, PhD, Roark Doubt, Lawrence G
Doucet, Rae Dougherty, Hugh Douglas, Haninia Dover, Edward J Dowdy, PhD,
Thomas J Dowling, James A Downey III, Doxtader, PhD, Arthur E Drake, PhD,
James F Drake, PhD, Frank E Driggers, PhD, Raymond L Driscoll, Richard Drisko,
PhD, Earl G Droessler, Murray Dryer, PhD, James L Dubard, PhD, Roy Dudman,
Roy Dudman, Michael S Duesbery, PhD, William T Duffy, PhD, Taylor Duke, Herbert M Dumas, Henry F Dunlap, PhD, George Dunnavan, John Ray Dunning, PhD,
Kenneth L Dunning, PhD, Wm N Durand, James A Durr, Chizuko M Dutta, PhD,
David L Dye, PhD, Steven Dyer.
Category: E
Dr Joe R Eagleman, PhD, Joe R Eagleman, PhD, Michael T Eckert, Lee W
Eddington, Lee W Eddington, George R Edlin, PhD, Ronald K Edquist, President,
David F Edwards, PhD, Eugene H Edwards, PhD, Maurice Egan, PhD, Jason
Egelston, Kenneth W Ehlers, PhD, Walter Eich, Val L Eichenlaub, PhD, Peter M
Eick, Thomas Eliaren Jr, Luis R Elias, PhD, Rush E Elkins, PhD, M Edmund
Ellion, PhD, Bruce Elliott, PhD, Robert D Elliott, Rodger L Elliott, David Ellis, Paul
J Ellis, PhD, Hugh W Ellsaesser, PhD, George F Emch, George Emerle, Louis
Emery, PhD, Amsrl-Is-Ew, Charles E Engelke, PhD, Raymond Engelke, PhD, Robert
W English, David Engwall, PhD, Gerard Enigk, John W Enz, PhD, Gilbert K
Eppich, Jeffrey F Eppink, Seymour Epstein, PhD, Robert D Erhardt Jr, Harold P

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Erickson, PhD, Richard Erickson, PhD, Paul Erlandson, PhD, James L Erskine,
PhD, Brenda Eskelson, Terry Ess, Edward R Estes, Albert Edwin Evans, PhD,
James A Evans, Leonard Evans, PhD, Ralph A Evans, PhD, A Gordon Everett, PhD.
Category: F
Gary A Fahl, Michael Fairbourne, John B Fallon, Anthony L Farinola, Bruce
Farlwald, W Michael Farmer, PhD, David Farrell, PhD, Robert P Farrell, Thomas
Farrior, Geo Farwell, PhD, Anthony J Favale, Felix Favorite, PhD, Sherwood
Fawcett, PhD, Gene R Feaster, PhD, J D Feichtner, PhD, J Roberto Feige, David
M Feit, Hank Feldstein, PhD, William J Felmlee, Charles M Ferrell, Craig Ferris,
Terence M Filiplak, R D Finch, PhD, Martin Finerty Jr, James Fink, PhD, Joanne
K Fink, PhD, Reinald G Finke, PhD, Melvin Wm First, PhD, David Fischel, PhD,
Ferol F Fish, PhD, Ed Fisher, John Fisher, PhD, Philip C Fisher, PhD, William
Gary Fisher, Richard A Fitch, Wade Fite, PhD, J Ed Fitzgerald, PhD, Donna
Fitzpatrick, Hugh M Fitzpatrick, Robert F Flagg, PhD, Robert Flicker, James L
Flocik, Lowell R Flud, Anthony H Foderaro, PhD, Gary R Foerster, Timothy Fohl,
PhD, Martin M Fontenot, Robert Foote, Dale Force, James L Fordham, Samuel W
Fordyce, Irving S Foster, PhD, J S Foster, Robt John Foster, PhD, Doyle F Fouquet,
Louis H Fowler, Grant R Fowles, PhD, Corri Fox, David Wm Fox, PhD, Russell E
Fox, PhD, David Fraley, PhD, Allan J Frank, Marchall E Frazer, PhD, James
Frazier, Bernard A Free, Wallace L Freeman, PhD, Stephen M Fremgen, William
S French, PhD, Frey, Edwin F Fricke, PhD, Gerald M Friedman, PhD, Herbert
Friedman, PhD, Joel Friedman, Friess, Gerald E Fritts, Eugene Frowe, S W
Fruehling, David H Fruhling, Charles Frye, Robert Fugrer, Norihiko Fukuta, PhD,
Charles Fuller, Joe Fulton, Harold Fuquay, Joseph T Furey, Thomas C Furnas Jr,
PhD, Nelson Fuson, PhD, Floyd Fusselman.
Category: G
Steven A Gaal, PhD, F Gabbard, PhD, L H Gabro, Gaffney, Richard Gaggioli,
PhD, George Gal, PhD, Eugene Galanter, PhD, Frank P Gallagher III, Jack Gallagher, PhD, Paul Galli Jr, Charles Gallina, PhD, Charles Gallina, PhD, William A
Gallus, Jr, PhD, Perry S Ganas, PhD, A K Ganguly, PhD, Carl Ganseivity, Floyd
Wayne Garber, PhD, S Paul Garber, Edward E Gardner, PhD, Hessle F Garner,
PhD, Jay M Garner, Alfred J Garrett, PhD, John C Garth, PhD, Jerrie W Gasch,
Robert S Gaston, G R Gathers, PhD, Thomas Gatliffe, William E Gee, D A Gedcke,
PhD, Elton W Geist, Charles Gelwall, Gary Gerardi, PhD, George S Gerlach, Ulrich
H Gerlach, PhD, Robert L Geyer, PhD, L H Giacoletto, PhD, Umberto Gianola, PhD,
Gordon Gibb, Lee Gibson, PhD, Peter F Giddings, W Allen Gilchrist, PhD, Claude
M Gillespie, PhD, Bruce B Gillies, George T Gillies, PhD, William Gilmore Jr, H
Scott Gingrich, Helen Ginzburg, James Given, Peter Glanz, PhD, Peter K Glanz,
PhD, Jerome E Glass, Thomas A Gleeson, PhD, Thomas A Gleeson, PhD, Dale P
Glover, Robert Glover, Will E Godbey, Terry L Godsey, David J Goerz, Malcolm
Goldberg, PhD, Malcom Golderberg, PhD, Ronald B Goldfarb, PhD, Bruce Goldman,
John P Goldsborough, PhD, Norman E Goldstein, PhD, Walter J Goldsworthy, Mark
J Golol, William R Gommel, PhD, John R Gonano, PhD, Michel Gondouin, PhD,
John B Goodenou, PhD, David Goodenough, PhD, Kent J Goodloe, Clifford Gordon,
James W Gordon, PhD, Robert Gordon, Wilbur H Goss, PhD, Henry Gotsch, Gordon
Gould, PhD, Robt G Gould, PhD, Robert G Graf, Leroy D Graff, Howard E Graham,
Lewis O Grant, Lawrence Grauvogel, Joe C Gray, Kevin J Gray, PhD, Robert C
Gray, Thoams Gray, Michael Grecco, Joseph Matthew Green, PhD, David Greene,
Donald M Greene, PhD, Miles Greenland, Reynold Greenstone, Anton Greenwald,
PhD, Gregory Greer, Howard Greger, David T Gregorich, PhD, J R Greig, PhD, Paul
Greiman, Daniel Grieser, Doreen Grieve, J Tyler Griffin, J Tyler Griffin, James Edward Griffin, PhD, M Griffin, PhD, Brandon Griffith, Richard T Grinstead, B F
Grossling, PhD, D J Grove, PhD, John C Grover, Timothy R Groves, PhD, William
Groves, Richard Grow, PhD, Johathan R Gruchala, Mike Gruntman, PhD, Richard
A Gudmundsen, PhD, Gareth E Guest, PhD, Thomas F Guetzloff, PhD, Peter H
Guldberg, Peter H Guldberg, Guldenzopf, PhD, Charles W Gullikson, PhD, Darryl
E Gunderson, Richard Gundry, Raj K Gupta, PhD, Philip F Gustafson, PhD, William Gustin, Donald T Guthrie, Steven L Gutsche, Jeng Yih Guu, PhD, Frank Guy,
PhD.
Category: H
Gottfried Haacke, PhD, Benjamin C Hablutzel, George Hacken, PhD, Glenn A
Hackwell, PhD, Lawrence Hadley, PhD, Frank A Hadsell, PhD, Jeffrey Haebrlin,
Anton F Haffer, Erich Hafner, PhD, G Richard Hagee, PhD, Arno K Hagenlocher,
PhD, Ismail B Haggag, PhD, Chuck R Haggett, Douglas C Hahn, John A Haiko,
Mary Hakim, M H Halderson, Francis A Hale, R A Haley, R W Hall, Jr, PhD, Robert Halladay, Martin B Halpern, PhD, Matthew M Hammer, Scott E Hampel, How-

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ard W Hanawalt, Lawrence Handley, PhD, Arthur L Handman, Sultan Haneed,
PhD, N Bruce Hanes, PhD, David Haney, Sunil Hangal, PhD, William Hankins, Arthur D Hanna, PhD, Jeff Hanna, RW Hannemann, Martin Hanninen, Edward
Hanrahan, PhD, E M Hansen, Robert C Hansen, PhD, Charles Hantzis, William
Happer, PhD, Michael P Harasym, Allan W Harbaugh, PhD, John H Harble, Harry
C Hardee, PhD, Harold C Harder, PhD, Clyde Hardin, James L Harding, PhD,
Mary K Harding, Thomas Harding, Thomas W Harding, PhD, Wm Harding, PhD,
Elwood Hardman, Henry R Hardy, PhD, Robert E Hardy, Mark Harjes, Eric A
Harms, Lynn Harper, David Harriman, Franklin S Harris Jr, PhD, Richard A Harris, PhD, S P Harris, PhD, Marvin Harrison, James Hart, Robert D Hart, M Hartman, Peter Hartwick, Kenneth C Harvey, PhD, John A Hasdal, PhD, Neal Haskell,
PhD, Jill Hasling, Floyd N Hasselrlis, Turner E Hasty, PhD, Ronald R Hatch, Larry
Hatcher, Eric W Hatfield, Peter Hatgelakas, J Hauger, PhD, Henry Haughey, Ken
Haught, PhD, Arthur Hausman, Peter Havanac, K Havenor, PhD, William Havens,
PhD, Kerry M Hawkins, Robert Hawkins, PhD, William K Hawkins, Howard Hayden, PhD, Dennis Hayes, PhD, James L Hayes, Carl H Hayn, PhD, George L
Hazelton, R N Hazelwood, PhD, William G Hazen, Harold E Headlee, G Herbert,
David R Hedin, PhD, Todd Hedlund, Harold G Hedrick, PhD, John Hefti, Walter
Heinrichs, William D Heinze, PhD, William D Heise, Thomas Helbing, Cecil
Helfgott, PhD, Marvin W Heller, PhD, Carl Helmick, Ron Helms, Philip Hemmig,
J Hemstreet, PhD, Dale Henderson, PhD, Gerald J Henderson, PhD, Richard G
Hendl, PhD, John B Hendricks, PhD, Tom A Hendrickson, PhD, Raymond Henkel,
PhD, Joseph Hennessey, Gregory W Henry, Malcolm Hepworth, PhD, John A Herb,
PhD, Donlad Herlew Jr, PhD, Roger M Herman, PhD, Don Herriott, Tom R
Herrmann, PhD, George Herzlinger, PhD, Cynthia Hess, PhD, George B Hess, PhD,
Karl Hess, PhD, Ralph A Hewes, PhD, Frederick Hewitt, PhD, Paul G Hewitt, Walter Hickox, Joseph H Higginbotham, PhD, Archie C Hill, PhD, Harvey F Hill, J C
Hill, PhD, Robert D Hill, PhD, Richard Hillger, PhD, Hilton F Hinderliter, PhD,
Robert Hirsch, PhD, Sol Hirsch, Donald A Hirst, PhD, Mark Hladik, Wai Ching Ho,
PhD, James L Hobart, PhD, George Hobbs, Lon Hocker, PhD, Sidney E Hodges,
PhD, Gus L Hoehn, PhD, William B Hoeing, C S Hoff, Thomas E Hoffer, PhD, John
R Hoffman, PhD, Marvin Morrison Hoffman, PhD, C Lester Hogan, PhD, David C
Hogg, PhD, LE Hoisington, PhD, David A Holcomb, Richard Holcombe, J Keen Holland, Richard Holland, Kenneth Hollenbaugh, PhD, Charles L Hollenbeck, William
A Hollerman, John T Holloway, PhD, Russell Holman, Johnny B Holmes, PhD, Edmond W Holroyd, PhD, Lowell H Holway, PhD, George Holzman, PhD, Philip E
Hoover, Richard Hoover, Francis J Hopcroft, George William Hopkins, PhD, Terry
Horn, John Horrenstine, Doc Horsley, PhD, William Horvath, PhD, James Hosgood,
Charles R Hosler, Richard F Houde, House, Robert M House, Michael S Howard,
PhD, Charles D Hoyle, PhD, Jam Hrabe, PhD, Bradford Hubbard, Harmon W Hubbard, PhD, Wilbert H Hubin, PhD, Colin Hudson, PhD, Brad Huffines, Woodie D
Huffman, James W Hugg, PhD, John Hulm, PhD, John L Hult, PhD, Brian Humphrey, William E Humphrey, PhD, Robert D Hunsucker, PhD, Hubert B Hunt, J
E Von Husen, John L Hubisz, PhD, Frank Hussey, Vivian K Hussey, Jerome G
Hust, John F Hutzenlaub, PhD, Alan W Hyatt, PhD, Eric Hyatt, PhD, James M
Hylko, Steven J Hynek.
Category: I
Rodney D Ice, PhD, Sherwood B Idso, PhD, Alex Ignatiev, PhD, Walter L Imm,
Anton L Inderbitzen, PhD, Karl Ingard, PhD, J Charles Ingraham, PhD, Mitio
Indkuti, PhD, Ronald H Isaac, PhD, Donald G Iselin, A Z Ismail, PhD.
Category: J
Bruce Jackson, Julius A Jackson Jr, K A Jackson, PhD, Warren Jackson, PhD,
Bruce Jacobs, Jimmy J Jacobson, PhD, Holger M Jaenisch, PhD, Sherwin W
Jamison, Kenneth S Jancaitis, PhD, Cole Janick, Norman Janke, PhD, Paul R Jann,
John Jaquess, Fred Jarka, Robert Jastrow, PhD, John A Jaszczak, PhD, Seymour
Jaye, Robert Jeanmaire, Keith Bartlett Jefferts, PhD, Thomas T Jeffries III, Jack
D Jenkins, Vincent F Jennemann, PhD, Paul A Jennings, PhD, Clayton E Jensen,
PhD, L Carl Jensen, Paul Edward T Jensen, Denzel Jenson, Robert Johannes, PhD,
Emil S Johansen, Anthony Johnson, Anthony O Johnson, Arlo F Johnson, PhD,
Charles M Johnson, PhD, Dale Johnson, Duane P Johnson, PhD, Gerald Johnson,
PhD, Horace Johnson, PhD, James R Johnson, PhD, Jeffrey Johnson, L R Johnson,
Laurence N Johnson, Leo F Johnson, PhD, Robert Johnson, PhD, Robt L Johnson,
PhD, Ronald Gene Johnson, PhD, Walter E Johnson, Wendell Johnson, William P
Johnson, David Johnston, Charles Jones, PhD, H M Jones, PhD, Kay H Jones, PhD,
Merrell R Jones, PhD, Mitchell Jones, Ray P Jones, Larry Josbeno, Daniel Juliano,
PhD.

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Category: K
Morton T Kagan, PhD, Jon P Kahler, David A Kallin, Kamal, PhD, W Kane, PhD,
Arthur R Kantrowitz, PhD, Bennett Kapp, PhD, Gabor Karadi, PhD, Francis W
Karasek, PhD, W Bradford Karcher, Munawar Karim, PhD, James Karom Jr,
Thomas W Karras, PhD, Ira Katz, PhD, Yale H Katz, David Kay, PhD, Marvin D
Kays, PhD, Michael Keables, PhD, Philip D Kearney, PhD, Horst H Kedesdy, PhD,
Richard A Keen, PhD, Ralph O Kehle, PhD, John E Keim, PhD, Karl Keim, D Steven Keller, PhD, Charles T Kelley, PhD, Fenton Crosland Kelley, PhD, Patrick R
Kelly, Paul Kelly, Ronald G Kelsey, Mike Kendall, Robert C Kendall, Peter H
Kendrick, Dallas C Kennedy II, PhD, Howard V Kennedy, PhD, J M Kennel, PhD,
A R Kenny, Josef Kercso, Clifford D Kern, PhD, Quentin A Kerns, John Charles
Kershenstein, PhD, Clement J Kevane, PhD, Elbert R Key, Frank Key, Riley
Kiminer, PhD, J S King, PhD, P I Kingsbury, PhD, Tommy C Kinnaird, John J R
Kinney, Gerald Lee Kinnison, PhD, Timothy P Kinsley, Roy H Kinslow, PhD, Thyl
E Kint, Peter Kirwin, Hugh Kissell, Thomas A Kitchens, PhD, Terence M Kite, PhD,
Geo S Klaiber, PhD, L T Klauder Jr, PhD, Klaus, PhD, Williad Kleckner, PhD,
Thomas Klein, Paul G Klemens, PhD, Kenneth F Klenk, PhD, Edwin Kiingman, D
A Klip, PhD, Duane V Kniebes, John Knight, PhD, Knightes, PhD, Richard H
Knipe, PhD, David Knoble, PhD, Mark Knoderer, Mark Knoderer, James S Koehler,
PhD, Robert A Kohl, PhD, Joshua O Kolawole, PhD, William Koldwyn, PhD, Lee
R Koller, PhD, Kenneth K Konrad, Christopher Konz, Robert P Koob, PhD, Kevin
D Kooistra, Jack I Kornfield, PhD, Theresa M Koscny, Fleetwood Koutz, PhD, William P Kovacik, PhD, Robert W Koza, Gregory A Kozera, Geoffrey A Krafft, PhD,
Paul Krail, PhD, Roman J Kramarsic, PhD, Gary Kramer, PhD, George G Krapfel,
Howard R Kratz, PhD, Lawrence C Kravitz, PhD, Robert F Kraye, William Kreiss,
PhD, Richard Kremer, PhD, Peter A Krenkel, PhD, Warren C Kreye, PhD, Robt E
Kribal, PhD, Jacqueline Krim, PhD, James G Krist, Louis G Kristjanson, Paul H
Kronfield, Peter G Krueger, PhD, Paul Kubicek, Moyses Kuchnir, PhD, Antonin
Kudrna, Peter Kuhn, PhD, Carl Kuhnen Jr, Matthew H Kulawiec, Andrew Kulchar,
Gordon Kuntz, PhD, Edward Kurdziel, Chris E Kuyatt, PhD, Tung-Sing Kwong.
Category: L
Kenneth M Labas, Melvin Labitt, Paul Lacelle, MD, PhD, John J Lacey Jr, James
Lafervers, PhD, John M Lafferty Jr, Eugene C Laford, PhD, Milton Laikin, William
Laing, George W Lambroff, Robert G Lamontagne, PhD, Robert G Lamontagne,
PhD, G D Lancaster, Paul Lancaster, H D Landahl, PhD, Richard L Lander, PhD,
Arthur Lange, Robert C Langley, George Laperle, Gerald J Lapeyre, PhD, Vince
Lara, James G Lareau, Ernest T Larson, Mark Larson, Reginald E Larson, Robert
Larson, PhD, Stanley Laster, PhD, Mike Lauriente, PhD, Jerome Lavine, PhD, Albert G Iles Law, PhD, Joel S Lawson, PhD, Kent Lawson, PhD, John F Lawyer,
Thomas W Layton, PhD, Paul D Lazay, MD, PhD, Susanne M Lea, PhD, Richard
Leamer, PhD, Charles W Lear, Albert O Learned, Jozef Lebiedzik, PhD, Lynn L
Leblanc, PhD, Jean-Pierre Leburton, PhD, Charles E Lee, J T Lee, Paul Lee, PhD,
H William Leech, PhD, Gail Legate, Mark R Legg, PhD, Donald R Lehman, PhD,
Troy Leingany, Eric E Lemke, Terry L Lemley, PhD, Leslie R Lemon, Andrew
Lenard, PhD, Roger X Lenard, Roland E Lentz, Stephen K Lentz, John F Lescher,
James D Lesikar, PhD, James Lessman, Nelson J Letourneau, PhD, Michael A
Leuck, H A Leupold, PhD, Walter Frederick Leverton, PhD, Gilbert Levin, PhD,
Stewart Levin, PhD, Arnold D Levine, PhD, Catherine Lewis, PhD, George R Lewis,
Richard C Lewis, Huilin Li, PhD, James J Licari, PhD, T Lick, PhD, James A
Liggett, PhD, Peter Liley, PhD, Jay Lilley, Jay Lindholm, Ralph Linsker, MD, PhD,
Clarence D Lipscombe III, PhD, Chian Liu, PhD, W M Liu, PhD, Robert S Livingston, PhD, Thomas J Lockhart, Jaques Loes, H William Lollar, Julian H Lombard,
PhD, G Lombardi, PhD, Leonard Lombardi, PhD, Bryan H Long, James A Long,
James D Long, David Longinotti, H Jerry Longley, PhD, Wm Longley Jr, PhD, Ronald Lorenz, Monty Losee, Stuart Loucks, L Richard Louden, PhD, Robert I Louttit,
PhD, Sadler Love, Robert Lovelace, Radon R Loveland, F Lowe, Thomas Lowinger,
PhD, Brian Lubbert, Alan H Lubell, Martin S Lubell, Michael D Lubin, PhD, Brian
Luckianow, Claus B Ludwig, PhD, Mark Ludwig, PhD, Mariann Lukan, Ronald
Lukas, PhD, Robert A Luke, PhD, Robert Luke, PhD, Jack Marling, PhD, J Lund,
Mark W Lund, PhD, Dennis L Lundberg, PhD, Theodore Lundquist, PhD, Jesse V
Lunsford, Anthony Lupo, PhD, Mark J Lupo, PhD, William H Lupton, PhD, J W
Luquire, PhD, Glenn R Lussky, John Lynch, PhD.
Category: M
Monte D Mabry, Howard Maccabee, MD, PhD, A MacDonald, Alexander Dainel
MacDonald, PhD, Brian MacDonald, Richard Macdougal, Char L Mack, Patrick
Mackey, Jay Mackie, Robert A Macrae, Peter Madaffari, Franklin D Maddox, R

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Magno, PhD, John P Maher, Pat Mahon, Robert A Maier, Jeffrey E Malan, Robert
Malouf, Gary M Malvin, PhD, James M Mandera, David J Maness, Kent M
Mangold, T A Manhart, Robt C Mania, PhD, Harold Manley, Joseph Bird Mann,
PhD, J Mannion, Charles Mansfield, PhD, John Mansfield, PhD, Samuel P March,
Jack J Marcinek, Richard M Marino, PhD, William D Marino, George Marklin, PhD,
Morris J Markovitz, Morris J Markovitz, William E Marlatt, PhD, Marsh, PhD, C
T Martin, Daniel W Martin, PhD, Edward Martin, Jerry Martin, L A Martin,
Lockhead Martin, PhD, Ronald L Martin, PhD, Ernest A Martinelli, PhD, Mario
Martini, PhD, Philip X Masciantonio, PhD, James V Masi, PhD, Conrad J Mason,
PhD, Conrad Mason, PhD, Wulf F Massell, PhD, Wulf F Massell, PhD, David S
Masterman, Ronald F Mathis, PhD, Dilip Mathur, PhD, Ron J Matlock, J Matolyak,
PhD, Harrison Matson, Paul R Matthews, Timothy V Mattson, Thomas E Mattus,
Richard Matula, PhD, David C Matzke, Paul Mauer, J G Mavroides, PhD, John E
May, PhD, John May, A Frank Mayadas, PhD, James Mayo, Robert McAdams, Robt
E McAdams, PhD, John Hart Mcadoo, PhD, William Bruce McAlister, PhD,
McAneny, PhD, Terry McArthur, Bruce R McAvoy, Michael F McCardle, William
Mccarter, Robert P McCarthy, Shaun L McCarthy, PhD, John Mccauley, Thomas A
McClelland, PhD, James O McClimans, R J McClure, M McCorcle, PhD, Billy M
McCormac, PhD, Philip Thomas McCormick, PhD, John G McCue, PhD, Robert G
McCuistion, Tim McDaniel, Dirk McDermott, James M Macdonald Jr, Malcolm W
McDonald, PhD, Ralph R McDonough, Edward McDowell, Jr, William Nordell
McElroy, PhD, Gerald N McEwen, PhD, Michael McGinn, Randall K McGivney, Stuart Mcgregor, John P McGuire, David F McIntosh, Robert J Mckay, John P
McKelvey, PhD, Wm B McKnight, PhD, James A McLennan, PhD, Gregory R
McNeill, Edward J McNiff, D Sean McPherson, Daniel E Mcpherson Jr, Reg
Meaker, Walter Medding, Sidney S Medley, PhD, James Medlin, William L Medlin,
PhD, Ralph D Meeker, PhD, Louis D Megehee, Karin Megerle, Leathem Mehaffey,
PhD, John L Meisenheimer, PhD, Ivars Melingailis, PhD, Kenneth E Mellendorf,
PhD, Gary Melvin, Arthur Mendonsa, Wm Menger, Samuel H Mentemeier, Micheal
D Mentzel, Leo Menz, PhD, Erhard R Menzel, PhD, Charles R Merigold, James B
Merkel, Marshal F Merriam, PhD, Dwight F Metzler, PhD, Donald I Meyer, PhD,
Frank H Meyer, Harold Meyer, Howard Meyer, Stuart L Meyer, PhD, Walter D
Meyer, PhD, Maurice A Meylan, PhD, Alesandru Mezincescu, PhD, Gerald J
Miatech, PhD, Patrick Michael, PhD, Paul C Michaelis, Andre F Michaudon, PhD,
C Michel, PhD, F Curtis Michel, PhD, John Medavaine, Marcus Middleton, John A
Mikus, PhD, John G Miles, Kelley F Miles, Ralph F Miles, PhD, Frederick H Milford, PhD, William G Millan, PhD, James P Millard, A S Miller, PhD, Donadl B Miller, PhD, Donald P Miller, PhD, George R Miller, Herman L Miller, Howard Miller,
PhD, James A Miller, Larry Miller, Lewis E Miller, Philip D Miller, PhD, Raymond
E Miller, PhD, Robert Charles Miller, PhD, Robert J Miller, PhD, Roger Miller, L
E Millet, PhD, Dan Millison, John J Mills, PhD, Paul Mills, Greg Millspaugh,
George H Milly, PhD, Wm B Mims, PhD, Minkin, PhD, David Mintzer, PhD,
Raymod Mires, PhD, Dale Mitchel, Robert H Mitchell, John B Mix, PhD, Jack Pitts
Mize, PhD, James J Mizera, Raymond C Mjolsness, PhD, K L Moazed, PhD, Paul
Mockett, PhD, Charles J Mode, PhD, Fersheed K Mody, PhD, Mary V Moggio, Philip Mohan, Gary A Molchan, D Mommsen, Ralph Monaghan, W Bryan Monosmith,
PhD, Christopher Monroe, PhD, Charles J Montrose, PhD, Donald W Moon, Rickie
D Moon, Young Moon, PhD, Richard T Mooney, Craig Moore, Michael S Moore,
PhD, Robert D Moore, Jr, John W Moran, Kou-Yiong Y Moravan, PhD, Allan J
Mord, PhD, William Moreland, Dena R Morford, Relbue M Morgan, PhD, Robert
Morgan, PhD, W Lowell Morgan, PhD, Carl H Morley, Lawrence Morley, PhD, Edward G Morris, Dan Morrow, Thomas M Morse, Kenneth E Mortenson, PhD, Ray
S Morton, Gary E Mosher, Malcolm Mossman, Jack Mott, PhD, Henry T Motz, PhD,
Lloyd Motz, PhD, Eugene A Mueller, PhD, George E Mueller, PhD, George Mueller,
PhD, William B Mueller, Barry B Muhoberac, PhD, J Mishtu A Mukerjee, Richard
L Mullen, John Muller, PhD, Justus Muller, Edward S Murduck, PhD, George
Murgel, PhD, Wayne K Murphey, PhD, Charles Murphy, PhD, John C Murphy,
PhD, Murphy, PhD, Lawrence E Murr, PhD, Frank Murray, PhD, Raymond L Murray, PhD, X J Musacchia, PhD, John D Myers, Mark T Myers, Glen Myska.
Category: N
Misac Nabighian, PhD, Edward Nadgorny, PhD, James Nagode, Dennis B
Nakamoto, Samuel J Nalley, PhD, Michael L Nance, Franklin Richard Nash, PhD,
Harry C Nash, PhD, Ronald O Neaffer, PhD, Victor Thomas Neal, PhD, Hugh
Neeson, Robert Neff, Robert Neff, John P Neglia, Leland K Neher, PhD, Charles A
Nelson, PhD, David L Nelson, David Nelson, PhD, Genne Nelson, Loren D Nelson,
PhD, Nelson A Perry, Robert Nerbun, PhD, Arthur H Nethercot, PhD, Charles H
Neuman, PhD, Paul Nevins, Jerry S Newcomb, John T Newell, PhD, Richard E

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Newell, Sam Newner, Richard S Newrock, PhD, Kerwin Ng, Liz Niccum, Chester
E Nichols, PhD, Davis Betz Nichols, PhD, Mark E Nichols, PhD, Roberta Nichols,
PhD, Eugene H Nicholson, PhD, George Nickas, PhD, Barry C Nielsen, Kurt
Nielsen, Henry Nikkel, Thomas G Nilan, PhD, Harmon Nine, PhD, James
Nitzschke, John D Noble, PhD, Michael L Noel, Raymond L Noel, Lasalle L Nolin,
Jack Noll, Bertram Nolte, PhD, Eugene Nooker, Philip A Norby, Sherman B Nornes,
PhD, William G Norrie, Clyde Northrup, PhD, Hallan C Notimier, PhD, Julian R
P Nott, Edward F Novak, J D Novotny, Jerzy Nowakowski, PhD, Gary P Noyes,
PhD, Hugh Nutley, PhD, Richard A Nyquist, PhD.
Category: O
Michael Oard, Deborah Jean OBannon, PhD, Richard L OConnell, Frederick
Kirk Odencrantz, PhD, Frederic C E Oder, PhD, Randy Oehling, Ordean S Oen,
PhD, Robert A Oetjen, PhD, Calvin Ogburn, Norbert W Ohara, PhD, William
Ohmstede, Steven E Olbrich, PhD, Fred Oliver, Kenneth Leo Oliver, PhD, Wm P
Oliver, PhD, Merrill M Olson, Ted Olson, James Oltmans II, Joe R ONeal, Russell
ONeal, PhD, George F Oneill, PhD, Robert E ONeill, Marchall F Onellion, PhD,
Gary L Oppliger, PhD, Drew R Van Orden, Johathan Orloff, PhD, Cornel G Ormsby,
Harold Osborn, Oskoorouichi, PhD, Charles Osterberg, PhD, Wayne Ott, PhD, Wm
J Otting, PhD, William Otto, Jacques Ovadia, PhD, Robert Ovellette, Albert W
Overhauser, PhD, Robert F Overmyer, Mark Owens, William C Owens.
Category: P
Karle Packard, Jack Paden, Robert R Palik, Richard W Palladino, Thomas Y
Palmer, John M Palms, PhD, Michael V Palvov, John A Pantelis, Francis Paolini,
PhD, Carles Herach Papas, PhD, Sastry U Pappu, PhD, James L Park, PhD, Eugene Parker, PhD, Raymond G Parker, Edward M Parma, Albert Parr, PhD, Christopher Parry, PhD, H D Parry, Zohreh Parsa, PhD, David H Parsons, W H Parsons,
PhD, David F Paskausky, PhD, David F Paskausky, PhD, James M Paterson, PhD,
Sandra Patrick, Randy Patterson, Robert W Patterson, Gary M Patton, Robert Paul,
PhD, Kermit Paulson, Arthur S Pavlovic, PhD, Charles H Paxton, Cyril J Payne,
Daniel Payne, F R Payne, PhD, Michael A Payne, PhD, Daniel N Payton, Zoran
Pazameta, PhD, Herry Peace, David Peacock, PhD, Durk Pearson, George J Pearson, PhD, David C Peaslee, PhD, Justin B Peatross, PhD, Michael J Pechan, PhD,
E L Peck, PhD, Edson R Peck, PhD, Christopher Peek, Gary Pekarek, David G
Pelka, PhD, Erik M Pell, PhD, M J Pellillo, Richard R Pemper, PhD, John Penn,
Samuel Penner, PhD, Linda Pequegnat, PhD, Darlene A Periconi-Balling, Charles
Perry, Nelson Perry, Kenneth F Persin, Persky, PhD, Heide Petermann, Calvin Peters, Jeffrey L Peters, Edward C Peterson, Jack E Peterson, PhD, Arthur Petraske,
Andrey Petukhov, PhD, Raymond J Pfeiffer, PhD, Bill Phebe, Frederick Phelps,
PhD, Herbert R Philipp, PhD, Richard A Phillips, PhD, James A Phillips, PhD, Jay
W Phippen, PhD, William Pickett, George Piers, Alan Pike, PhD, David M Pike,
Gordon E Pike, PhD, Arturs Piksis, PhD, Lester Pilcher, Valter E Pilcher, PhD,
Robert A Piloquin, Pine, PhD, Ervin L Piper, Daniel J Pisano, PhD, Jack Piskura,
Fred Pitman, James D Plimpton, PhD, David Pocengul, Steve C Poe, William Poley,
Polinger, PhD, William J Polson, PhD, Walter L Pondrom, PhD, Kurt W Pontasch,
PhD, G Albert Popson, PhD, Bonne Posma, Richard W Postma, PhD, James E
Potzick, Edward T Powell, PhD, Mark L Powell, Michael Robert Powell, PhD, Daren
Powers, PhD, Robert W Powitz, PhD, C Dan Preston, Kenneth Price, PhD, Donald
W Pritchard, PhD, David G Proctor, PhD, Tso-Ping Ma, PhD, Jesus R Provencio,
PhD, Frederick D Provenza, PhD, Anthony J Provenzano, PhD, L L Pruitt, Bruce
Purcell, Cary C Purdy, James K Purpura, George Putman, PhD, Thomas H Putman,
PhD, Abbott A Putnam, Erling Pytte, PhD.
Category: Q
Kathy Qin, James Qualey, PhD, Russell Qualls, PhD, John J Quinn, PhD, Shirley
J Quinn, Phil Quire, Karl S Quisenberry, PhD, Patrick W Quist.
Category: R
Bernard Raab, PhD, Steven Rabe, Harold Raemer, PhD, Dejan Rajcic, James A
Ralph, Frederick Rambow, PhD, Rafael G Ramirez, PhD, Simon Ramo, PhD, Benjamin F Ramsey, Madeline Ramsey, Charles A Randall, PhD, Joseph L Randall,
PhD, William P Raney, PhD, C J Ransom, PhD, W R Ransone, James Rasor, Ned
S Rasor, PhD, Howard Rast, PhD, Dennis Rathman, PhD, Hukum S Rathor, PhD,
Andrew A Rathsack, Steven Ratliff, PhD, Alfred Ratz, PhD, Richard Rauch, PhD,
Kyle Rawlings, PhD, David Thomas Read, PhD, Robert G Read, Andreas B
Rechnitzer, PhD, Charles W Rector, PhD, Larry K Reddig, Noeman Redford, Robert
H Rediker, PhD, C Reed, PhD, Emmett Van Reed, Max E Reed, PhD, WR Reeves,
Carl J Regone, John Reichenbach, James Reid, PhD, Leonard Reiffel, PhD, William

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Reifsnyder, PhD, Hugh Reilly, Thomas L Reinecke, PhD, John W Reinert, David
Relihan, Marlin E Remley, PhD, Mack Remlinger, Nicholas A Renzetti, PhD, R H
Reuter, PhD, Robert Walter Rex, PhD, Bruce Reynolds, PhD, Robert Ware Reynolds,
PhD, John E Rhoads, PhD, John R Rhodes, J J Richard, Benjamin Richards, PhD,
Bernard L Richards, PhD, Ralph J Richardson, PhD, Douglas W Ricks, PhD, R J
Riddell, PhD, Robt W Riedel, Elliott A Riggs, PhD, James W Riggs, PhD, Robert
Righter, Jim Riker, PhD, Gary T Riley, William Riley, Dan H Rimmer, Charles E
Rinehart Jr, PhD, Roy Ringo, PhD, Winthrop Risk, MD, PhD, Allan Roberts, Kenneth Roberts, Norman Hailstone Roberts, PhD, Donald K Robertson, George H Robertson, PhD, Stanley L Robertson, PhD, Clark S Robinson, Michael J Robrecht,
David A Roddy, Jonathan P Rode, PhD, Rocky Roden, Brian D Rodriguez, Robt C
Roeder, PhD, Raylan Roetman, Robert C Rohr, PhD, John H Rohrbaugh, PhD, Neal
Rohrbaugh, Oscar A Rondon, PhD, John Roscoe, PhD, Benny H Rose, PhD, David
Rose, PhD, Kenneth L Rose, PhD, Frederick A Rosell, Alan Rosen, PhD, Richard
Rosencrans, Robert Rosene, Allan Ross, Arthur Ross, Elliot Rothkopf, PhD, Wm S
Rothwell, PhD, Lawrence J Rouse, PhD, W Jeffrey Row, James M Rowe, PhD, Stephen Rowley, G Roysdon, John Rozenbergs, PhD, Balaz F Rozsnyai, PhD, Arthur
Rubin, Daniel Rubinstein, PhD, Douglas Rudenko, Raymond L Ruehle, Robert
Reuss, Donald E Ruminer, George Rumney, PhD, Kim J Runk, Gerald Rupert, PhD,
Louis J Rusconi, PhD, B Rush, PhD, Cynthia B Russell, Kenneth Russell, Mark
Russell, PhD, Robert Rutherford, Patrick Rutty, Mary Ruwart, PhD, Bill C Ryan,
PhD, Frederick M Ryan, PhD, Jean Ryan, PhD, John W Ryon, PhD.
Category: S
Patrick Saatzer, PhD, Edward S Sabisky, PhD, Julius Jay Sabo, Frank Sacco,
Frederick Sachs, PhD, Thomas Dudley Sachs, PhD, James C Sadler, James C
Sadler, Jerry F Sagendorf, Eugene Salamin, James A Salsgiver, George Albert Samara, PhD, Douglas Sampson, PhD, Douglas Sampson, PhD, John F Sandell, PhD,
Wm Marion Sandefur, PhD, Eric Sanden, PhD, Jerrell L Sanders, Richard M Sanders, PhD, Andrew Sandorfi, PhD, Wayne M Sandstrom, PhD, G S Santi, Mykola
Saporoschenko, PhD, Dalip K Sarin, Lynn Redmon Sarles, PhD, Ronald G Sarrat,
Raymond Edmund Sarwinski, PhD, Richard Sasiela, PhD, Edward A Saunders,
PhD, Jason Saunderson, PhD, David P Sauter, S C Saxena, PhD, Vinod K Saxena,
PhD, Vinod K Saxena, PhD, George P Saxon, PhD, Razi Saydjari, MD, Thomas S
Scanlon Jr, Marc A Scarchilli, James R Scarlett, Lawrence A Schaal, Thomas S
Schalk, Hans Schantz, PhD, Darrell R Scharf, Richard Scharf, John F Schatz, PhD,
Harvey Schau, PhD, Larry Schecter, PhD, Frank Schell, MD, Keith J Schiager,
PhD, Walter Schimmerling, PhD, Guenter Martin Schindler, PhD, Hassel Charles
Schjelderup, PhD, Jeffrey Schleher, Robert A Schluter, PhD, Frederick Schmidlin,
PhD, Philip L Schmitz, Marcel R Schmorak, PhD, Douglas G Schneider, John
Schneider, PhD, Michael Schneider, PhD, George L Schofield Jr, PhD, James G
Schofield, Paul Schrade, Robert Schrader, John L Schrag, PhD, Martin Wm
Schramm, PhD, Ethan J Schreier, PhD, Donald Schuder, Steve Schulte, PE, James
J Schultheis, Frederick Schultz, PhD, Thomas A Schultz, Michael Schulz, Scofield,
PhD, James F Scoggin, PhD, Theodore T Scolman, PhD, Stylianos P Scordilis, PhD,
Clive R Scorey, PhD, Charles N Scott, Scott Scrupski, James B Seaborn, PhD, John
D Seagrave, PhD, Chris L Seaman, PhD, Robert D Sears, Paul A Sease, George A
Seaver, PhD, Sederholm, Fred Seeber, PhD, Warren G Segelken, PhD, Fritz A
Seiler, PhD, Jerold A Seitchik, PhD, James A Selasky, Harner Selvidge, PhD, Mark
Semon, PhD, Richard G Semonin, William Sens, Karl A Sense, Nicholas S Sereno,
PhD, Byron R Sever, PhD, Harry Sewell, PhD, James Sewell, Richard U Shafer,
Wayne Shaffer, Michael L Shand, PhD, Anatole Shapiro, PhD, Edward K Shapiro,
PhD, Ralph Shapiro, PhD, James Sharp, Francis Sharpton, PhD, Glenn E Shaw,
PhD, Lawrence H Shaw, Steven Shaw, Roy W Shawcroft, PhD, Thomas Sheahen,
PhD, James Shelton, PhD, Hao Ming Shen, PhD, Shen, Moses M Sheppard, PhD,
B Sherrill, Frank Shinneman, Calvin Shipbaugh, PhD, Scott T Shipley, PhD, George
A Shirn, PhD, Kandiah Shivanandan, PhD, Andrew Shkolnik, William Shockley, M
A Short, PhD, Martin Shotzberger, Curtis A Shuman, PhD, Edwin Shykind, PhD,
Kurt Sickles, Richard W Siegel, PhD, Richard Ernest Siemens, Arnold J Sierk, PhD,
Wayne Sievers, PhD, Henno Siismets, Lt Col Henry W Silk, Joseph D Silverstein,
PhD, E Lee Simmons, MD, Ralph O Simmons, PhD, Wm W Simmons, PhD, Albert
Simon, PhD, Jack Simonton, Chirstopher Simpson, Robert S Simpson, S Fred Singer, PhD, Lal P S Singh, PhD, Raj N Singh, Norman Sissenwine, Michael Sitko, PhD,
Andrew Sivak, PhD, Michael Sivertsen, Gary W Sjolander, PhD, Riley Skeen, Damir
S Skerl, Skluzacek, PhD, Frederick W Slee, PhD, Faye Slift, Michele E Slinkard,
Anthony R Slotwinski, Harold S Slusher, PhD, Peter J Van Slyke, Alexander G
Smith, PhD, Bruce W Smith P E, Donald R Smith, PhD, Earl W Smith, PhD, Frederick W Smith, PhD, James R Smith, John R Smith, PhD, Michael Smith, Neil M

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Smith, Richard Lloyd Smith, PhD, Rick Smith, Thane Smith, PhD, William Smith,
Gilbert Snell, Walter L Snell, Leonard W Snellman, PhD, C R Snider, James J
Snodgrass, William R Snow, PhD, Donald P Snowden, PhD, Fred F C Snyder, Robert Soberman, PhD, Jon Sollid, PhD, Wanda C Soo Young, Brent A Sorensen, James
A Sorenson, PhD, Norman Sossong, PhD, Wallace W Souder, PhD, Frank E South,
PhD, Robert R Speers, PhD, Edward L Spence, PhD, Charles Spencer, Daniel Spencer, Charles L Spiegel, Andrew Spiessbach, PhD, Joel S Spira, John G Spitzley, Robert H Springer, PhD, James Kent Sprinkle, Julien C Sprott, PhD, D Sprowl, PhD,
Eve S Sprunt, PhD, Charles F Squire, PhD, Robert M St John, PhD, Kim W
Stahnke, Drago Stankovic, Glenn Stanwick, Harvey J Stapleton, PhD, Fred
Starheim, PhD, Chauncey Starr, PhD, Gene Start, Jennifer Staszel, Herman Statz,
PhD, Harold F Staunton, PhD, John Staunton, Michael A Steinberg, Kenneth B
Steinbruegge, Ray L Steinmetz, Frank R Steldt, PhD, Jesse J Stephens, PhD, Lou
Stephens, Robert D Stephens, Stephen M Sterbenz, PhD, Howard O Stevens, Lewis
A Stevens, Robert Stevenson, PhD, William Stewart, PhD, Carleton C Stewart,
Glenn A Stewart, PhD, Harris B Stewart, PhD, Homer J Stewart, PhD, William A
Stewart, William L Stewart, Bernard Stiff, Regan Stinnett, PhD, Norman D Stockwell, PhD, W Ross Stone, PhD, James R Storey, William T Storey, Charles L Storrs,
PhD, Gregory J Story, Glenn E Stout, PhD, David Stowell, David Strand, Thomas
F Stratton, PhD, W R Stratton, PhD, Joe M Straus, PhD, Edward A Streed, Sharon
R Streight, PhD, George Strella, James S Strickland, PhD, Geo L Strobel, PhD,
David H Strome, PhD, Forrest C Strome, PhD, Alan E Strong, PhD, Alan Strong,
PhD, William J Strong, PhD, Mark W Strovink, PhD, Roger D Stuck, Robert Stupp,
G Sturges, Victor F Sturm, Eric Stusnick, PhD, Bill Styer, Daniel Subach, PhD,
Subraman, John T Suggs Jr, Richrad Sullivan, Thomas J Sullivan, PhD, Donald L
Summers, Donald Supkow, PhD, Earl C Sutherland, PhD, Jordan L Sutton, Todd
W Sutton, Jon R Swanson, PhD, Robert N Swanson, Hilmar Swenson, PhD, Don
E Swets, Donald M Swingle, PhD, Burton L Sylvern, Ronald J Szaider, Edwin
Szymanski, PhD.
Category: T
Keith A Taggart, PhD, Saeed Taherian, PhD, Samuel Taimuty, PhD, Gerald Tait,
Willard L Talbert, PhD, Jim Tallon, Daniel J Tambasco, PhD, Louis A Tamburino,
PhD, Lukas Tamm, PhD, Peter E Tannenwald, PhD, Daniel Tao, PhD, Frederick
D Tappert, PhD, Suren A Tatulian, PhD, Byron Taylor, Eugene W Taylor, James
Taylor, PhD, Michael K Taylor, Edward Teller, PhD, Lee C Teng, PhD, Jeffrey
Tennant, PhD, Steven Terwilliger, Eugene Theios, James Thissell, Gordon A Thomas, PhD, Martin J Thomas, PhD, Richard Thomas, PhD, William H Thomason, PhD,
Richard Thompson, Richard Thompson, Warren Thompson, PhD, Wm B Thompson,
PhD, Walter W Thomsen, Ker C Thomson, Craige Thorn, PhD, James A Thornhill,
T Thornton, Arnold W Thorton, PhD, Eugene D Tidwell, Calvin O Tiller, Jennifer
L Tillman, Clarence N Tinker, Merlin Tipton, Robert W Titus, Arthur R Tobey,
PhD, Joseph J Tobias, Joseph D Tobiason, PhD, Norman Tolk, PhD, John Toman,
Kurt Toman, PhD, James Tomberlin, Randy Tomkins, Daniel Tonn, PhD, Brian P
Tonner, PhD, Steven A Tonsfeldt, PhD, George Tope, Carlos Toroes, Charles J
Touhill, PhD, Roger Townsend, Joseph C Tracy, PhD, George T Trammell, PhD, Rex
Trammell, Felix Rodriguez Trelles, PhD, D H Trenscell, J Trevino, Roy A Tucker,
Daniel Tudor, PhD, J Paul Tullis, PhD, Richard Turiczek, Alvis G Turner, PhD,
Robert E Turner, PhD, Thomas Turner, William Turner, PhD, Joseph Tutak, Kenneth L Tuttle, PhD, Ben Tuval, David Tweedy, Arthur G Tweet, PhD, Somdev
Tyagi, PhD.
Category: U
Herbert M S Uberall, PhD, David J Ulsh, Glenn Underhill, PhD, John D Underwood, Kot Unrug, PhD, Donna Utley, PhD.
Category: V
J Peter Vajk, PhD, William P Vale, Oriol T Valls, PhD, Van Domelen, Bruce Harold, PhD, Ruth Van Knapp, Dominique Van Nostrand, Donald O Van Ostenburg,
PhD, Earl Van Reenan, Willliam Vanarsdale, PhD, Vandemerwe, PhD, David H
Vanhise, Walker S Vaning, Larry Vardiman, PhD, Nancy Vardiman-Hall, Michael
O Varner, Lawrence J Varnerin, PhD, Stanley S Vasa, William W Vaughan, PhD,
Wm Walton Vaughan, PhD, Sidney E Veazey, PhD, Karl F Veith, PhD, Theodore
E Veltfort, David Vermilyea, James Ira Vette, PhD, Roy E Vincik, Kalman N Vizy,
PhD, Henry Vogel, PhD, Karl Vogler, PhD, James Vogler, PhD, Philip A Volker,
Philip A Volker, James Vollmer, PhD, Mike Vossen, George Vourvopoulos, PhD.

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Category: W
Alfred Wagner, Edward Wagner, Orvin Edson Wagner, PhD, Marvin L Wagoner,
Richard I Waite Jr, Richard Wales, Robert A Walish, Joe A Walker, P David Walker, William Delany Walker, PhD, William W Walker, PhD, James P Wallace, Joel
D Walls, PhD, Kevin Walsh, Walter M Walsh Jr, PhD, John F Walter, PhD, Robert
F Walter, PhD, Michael D Walters, PhD, R B Walton, PhD, Maynard C Waltz,
James E Wanamaker, David Y Wang, PhD, Zhijing Wang, PhD, Roscoe F Ward,
PhD, Ward, John F Wardle, PhD, John F Ware, Richard C Waring, Ross Warner,
H Waslik, PhD, George A Waters, Dean A Watkins, PhD, Gary W Watson, William
Watson, PhD, Charles Wax, PhD, John Waymouth, PhD, Ronald Weaver, George
Webb Jr, Theodore S Webb, PhD, Alfred C Webber, Allen H Weber, PhD, Anthony
J Weber, Michael Weber, D J Wechsler, Brent M Wedding, PhD, Lloyd Weese, William Weese, Walter F Wegst, PhD, Steven Weise, Max T Weiss, PhD, Ima Wells,
Wells, PhD, William Wells, Patrick T Welsh, PhD, Theodore A Welton, PhD, Michael Wendorf, R C Wentworth, PhD, Mike Wentzell, MD, Hans-Helmut Werner,
PhD, Smiuel Werner, PhD, Robert H Wertheim, Richard P Wesenberg, Laurence N
Wesson, Mark E Westcott, Burt O Westerman, Eric R Westphal, PhD, Norris C
Wetters, Jack Weyland, PhD, C Wheeler, David Wheeler, John F Wheeler, Kenneth
T Wheeler, PhD, William L Wheller, Larry Wheelock, R S Wherler, David J White,
Donald R White, PhD, Douglas White, PhD, John L White, PhD, Lowell White, PhD,
Robt Lee White, PhD, Thomas W Whitehead, Jr, PhD, R Whiting, Robert Whitten,
PhD, E H Wichmann, PhD, Raymond V Wick, PhD, Donald J Wickwire, Gordon
Wieduwilt, W Gordon Wieduwilt, King W Wieman, Chuck Wiese, John Wiggins,
PhD, Kenneth A Wigner, John Wilburn, Richard B Wilkens III, Eugene M Wilkins,
PhD, S Curtis Wilkins, Harvey B Willard, PhD, Willett, PhD, Paul T Willhite, Louis
E Willhoit Jr, PhD, Clark William, Van William, PhD, Dansy Williams, Forrest R
Williams, Neal Thomas Williams, Talmage Williams, Thomas Williams, PhD,
Vernon Williams, Alan J Willoughby, Keith P Willson, Clyde L Wilson, PhD, David
A Wilson, David W Wilson, PhD, Donald Wilson, Owen Wilson, Theron Wilson, Timothy M Wilson, PhD, Wm E Wilson, Donn B Wimmer, PhD, Kenelm C Winslow,
William K Winter, PhD, John B Winters, P Winters, Donald F Winterstein, PhD,
Floyd A Wise, Frank W Wise, PhD, Chester E Wisner, Abund O Wist, PhD, James
M Witting, PhD, Warren F Witzig, PhD, William Wohler, Gene Wolfe, John C Wolfe,
PhD, Milo M Wolff, PhD, Paul M Wolff, PhD, Eligius Wolicki, PhD, Cyrus Wood,
James M Wood, John K Wood, PhD, Keith Woodard, Richard Woodard, PhD, Patrick
J Wooding, John P Woods, PhD, Robert F Woods, Gary K Woodward, Alice Woosley,
Rodney Wooster, J Workley, D E Wortman, PhD, J Lamar Worzel, PhD, Peter
Wrenshall, Royce E Wrick, Harlow Wright, Keith H Wrolstad, PhD, Peter T Wu,
PhD, Wemin Wu, PhD, John M Wuerth, Philip Wyatt, PhD, Bruce C Wyman, PhD,
Peter Wyzinski, MD.
Category: Y
Dmeter Yablonsky, PhD, Harold L Yarger, PhD, John Yarnell, PhD, John L Yates,
Scott Yates, PhD, Hubert P Yockey, PhD, Marvel Yoder, PhD, Thomas Lester Yohe,
PhD, Nicholas J Yonker, Edwin York, George W York Jr, PhD, A Young, PhD, Donald E Young, PhD, Lloyd M Young, PhD, Robert A Young, PhD, Wei Young, PhD,
Phillip L Youngblood, Luke Dhia Liu Yuan, PhD, Mark Yuly, PhD, Sulhi H Yungul,
PhD.
Category: Z
Daniel J Zaffarano, PhD, Marco Zaider, PhD, Joseph A Zak, PhD, James G
Zapert, Josephh Zappia, Lawrence E Zeeb, Fred Zeile, Bruce Zeitlin, Claude Zeller,
PhD, Hua-Wei Zhou, PhD, Jehuda Ziegler, PhD, Paul Ziemer, PhD, Carl Zietlow,
Aaron L Zimmerman, E Leroy Zimmerman, PhD, Elmer Leroy Zimmerman, PhD,
John E Zimmerman, John R Zimmerman, PhD, Roger Zimmerman, Sally Zinke,
Werner Zinn, Richard J Zinno, Harold Zirin, PhD, Martin V Zombeck, PhD.
5017 Chemistry, Biochemistry, Biology, and other Life Sciences Signers
(http://www.oism.org/pproject/bsci.htm, February 24, 2006)
Category: A
Earl Aagaard, PhD, Roger L Aamodt, PhD, Hamed Abbas, PhD, Ursula K Abbott,
PhD, Riaz F Abdulla, PhD, Wayne Aben, Earl A Abrahamson, PhD, J Wayne Achee,
D T Achord, PhD, William Ackerman, Brian Adam, PhD, Daniel Adams, PhD,
George B Adams, PhD, James W Adams, Jim Adadms, John E Adams, PhD, Phillip
Adams, PhD, Richard E Adams, Richard L Adams, Roy M Adams, PhD, Wilton
Adams, PhD, Wilton T Adams, PhD, John K Addy, PhD, C William Ade, Albert H
Adelman, PhD, Barnet R Adelman, Ronald A Adkins, PhD, Norman Adler, PhD,

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Siegfried Aftergut, PhD, Kenneth Agnes, Jorge T Aguinadlo, Mumtaz Ahmed, PhD,
Robert Ahokas, PhD, Edward Ahrens, Rolland W Ahrens, PhD, Robert M Ahring,
PhD, Brian R Ainley, David J Akers, Robert J Alaimo, PhD, Vincent M Albanese,
Timothy A Albers, MD, Rudolph C Albrecht, Fred R Albright, PhD, Robert Lee
Albright, PhD, Garrett D Alcorn, MD, Thomas Alderson, PhD, Franklin D Aldrich,
PhD, Richard J Aldrich, PhD, Samuel Aldrich, PhD, Samuel Aldrich, PhD, Steven
J Alessandro, Alex F Alessandrini, Joe Alex, Ira Alexander, Robert Alford, R
Allahyari, PhD, Emma G Allen, PhD, Eric R Allen, PhD, Kenneth Allen, Pampselo
Allen, Roger B Allen, PhD, Robert T Van Aller, PhD, Carl Allesandro, Craig Allison,
Albert L Allred, PhD, Patrick Aloutto, PhD, James Aloye, John Alsop, PhD, Sally
Alston, Charles Alt, David Altman, PhD, Burton M Altura, PhD, Leo E Amborski,
PhD, Donald F Amend, PhD, Marvin E Ament, Robert C Amero, Moris Amon, PhD,
Bonnie Amos, PhD, Terrell Andersen, PhD, Wilford H Andersen, PhD, A E Anderson, Anderson, Bruce M Anderson, C M Anderson Jr, Cristopher Anderson, David
Anderson, MD, David R Anderson, PhD, Donald Hervin Anderson, PhD, Donald N
Anderson, PhD, Elmer Anderson, PhD, Gerald L Anderson, Ingrid Anderson, PhD,
Janis W Anderson, John O Anderson, Julia W Anderson, PhD, Mary Anderson, Nathan Anderson, R L Anderson, Thomas Anderson, PhD, John R Andrade, PhD,
Manuel Andrade, Ivan Andrasik, James Andrew, John S Andrews, PhD, Mel Andrews, Russell S Andrews, PhD, Mb Andrus, PhD, Francis M Angeloni, PhD, Claude
B Anger, Ernest Angino, PhD, Kevin P Ankenbrand, David Arnold, John Anthes,
PhD, Robt D Anthony, David R Appel, John Applegath, Charles Apter, PhD, Howard Arbaugh, John Arcadi, MD, Ed Arce, John Arch, Christopher Arend, William
Arion, PhD, Z S Ariyan, PhD, Richard Armentrout, PhD, Walt Armer, Clifford Armstrong, Joseph C Armstrong, PhD, Marvin D Armstrong, PhD, Robert L Armstrong,
PhD, Philip J Arnholt, PhD, Charles Arnold, PhD, Seymour Aronson, PhD, Adrian
L Arp, PhD, Charles H Arrington, PhD, Dale E Arrington, PhD, A G Ash, A Ashley,
PhD, Warren C Ashley, PhD, Bob Ashworth, Tom W Asmus, PhD, Robert D Athey
Jr, PhD, Robert Douglas Athey, PhD, Mark Atwood, PhD, Walter Auclair, PhD,
Louis A Auerbach, Keith H Aufderheide, PhD, J Augspurger, PhD, Frederick N
Aukeman, Bruce S Ault, PhD, Alfred E Austin, PhD, Carl Fulton Austin, PhD, Robert L Austin, Victor H Averbach, PhD, Alex Avery, Philip Avery, Arthur J Avila,
Joseph Avruch, MD, Robert C Ayers, PhD, T G Ayres, Dany Ayseur, Alison M Azar,
Max Azevedo.
Category: B
Bryan Baab, Ronald R Bach, PhD, Frederick A Bacher, Drury L Bacon, Frank R
Bacon, Robert Baczuk, J Badenhoop, PhD, Carl Baer, PhD, Edward A Baetke, Joseph A Baglio, PhD, J Brent Bagshaw, Andrejs Baidins, PhD, Carl Wm Bailey, PhD,
David G Bailey, PhD, James Bailey, Robert L Bailey, PhD, Ronald M Bailey, John
Bakane, Barton S Baker, PhD, Daniel M Baker, PhD, Don Robert Baker, PhD, Harold N Baker, PhD, Howard T Baker, J Baker, PhD, Louis Baker, PhD, Robert D
Baker, PhD, Robert J Baker, W O Baker, PhD, Brent P Balcer, Andrew A Baldoni,
PhD, Ransom Baldwin, PhD, A Richard Baldwin, PhD, Cliff Bale, P Balis, Greg
Ballengee, Walter E Ballinger, PhD, Martin Balow, Arden A Baltensperger, PhD,
Debendranath Banerjee, PhD, Kernan M Banker, Kernen Banker, Willard Banman,
William Bannister, PhD, Ronald Barany, PhD, Ted R Barben II, Charleton C Bard,
PhD, Charles E Bardsley, PhD, Mark J Bareta, Thomas Barfnecht, PhD, Franklin
B Barker, PhD, Horace A Barker, PhD, Leroy N Barker, PhD, Dwight G Barkley,
PhD, John E Barkley, PhD, Neal Barkley, B Barks, PhD, Anthony Barlow, PhD,
Alex Barlowen, Richard Barnes, Robert F Barnes, PhD, L Bruce Barnett, PhD,
Debra Barngrover, PhD, Louis J Barone, Kenneth Barr, Kenneth H Barratt, Clem
A Barrere, PhD, Helen Barrett, Kenneth A Barrett, Oscar N Barron, B Bartley,
PhD, Gary Bartley, Bratzatt, PhD, John Basinski, PhD, George Baskin, Jonathan
Langer Bass, PhD, Alton Herman Bassett, Mark J Bassett, PhD, David Batchelder,
Robert L Batdorf, PhD, Lynn S Bates, PhD, Robert W Batey, George Batten, PhD,
Jack Battle, Armand Bauer, PhD, Larry G Bauer, PhD, Thomas Bauer, T Mack
Baugh, Kurt Baum, PhD, Linda L Baum, PhD, Arthur N Baumann, Wolfgang
Baumann, PhD, Lisa L Baumbach, PhD, Jim Baumer, PhD, A W Baumgartner,
Monte Paul Bawden, PhD, Steve Bayless, Gary Beall, PhD, Herbert Beall, PhD,
Paula T Beall, PhD, Samuel E Beall, Thomas Beard, Scott Beardemphl, Henry J
Bearden, PhD, Wm Beardmore, PhD, James Beattie, PhD, Robert A Beaudet, PhD,
Paul Becher, PhD, Bill Beck, Curt B Beck, Lloyd Beck, Clarence Becker, PhD, Ernest I Becker, Harry C Becker, PhD, John C Becker, Ralph Sherman Becker, PhD,
Robert P Becker, PhD, Robert S Becker, PhD, Wilbur Becker, Arnold Beckman,
PhD, Joseph A Beckman, PhD, Merrill Beckstead, PhD, Glenn Bedell, PhD, Thomas
E Bedell, PhD, William C Bedoit, PhD, Curtis M Beechan, PhD, Scott K Beegle,
Giselle Beeker, Francis J Behal, PhD, Pat Behm, Greg P Behrens, Richard Behrens,

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PhD, John Behun, PhD, Rudi Beichel, Arthur B Reindorff, PhD, Walter F Beineke,
PhD, Ihor Bekersky, PhD, Gregory Bell, Robert Bell, Daniel T Belmont, PhD, Stephen Belmont, PhD, James Noble Bemiller, PhD, John Ben, Raymond L Bendure,
PhD, James H Benedict, PhD, David Benforado, Ashley Bengali, PhD, Ford
Benham, John Benjamin, PhD, William Benne, PhD, Donald W Bennett, G Bennett,
PhD, RS Bennett, Sharon Beniot, Andrew A Benson, PhD, Sidney W Benson, PhD,
William Benson, Ray Bentall, Kenton E Bentley, PhD, Allen W Benton, PhD, Wesley G Bentrude, PhD, Ray A Berard, PhD, Hugh Berckmueller, MD, J Berg, PhD,
Ronald Berg, Alan Berger, MD, T F Berger, Arne Bergh, PhD, C B Bergin, Oswald
R Bergmann, PhD, John J Berky, PhD, Elliot Berman, PhD, Louis Bernath, PhD,
Julius R Berreth, Lester P Berriman, Dan Berry, James W Berry, PhD, Robert W
Berry, PhD, Roy A Berry, PhD, William Berry, Charles F Bersch, Robert L Bertram,
B Rodney Bertramson, PhD, Nedavia Bethlahmy, PhD, George W Bettge, Rowland
S Bevans, PhD, Robert Beverly, Vicky L Bevilacqua, PhD, William R Bibb, PhD,
Peter B Eichelberger, Michael D Bick, PhD, Arden Bicker, Ervin F Bickley Jr, Kenneth Bielat, PhD, Yan Bielek, Gregg Bierei, Theo Karl Bierlein, PhD, Joseph F
Bieron, PhD, Donald Bigg, PhD, James Biggs, PhD, R Dale Biggs, PhD, Keith
Bildstein, PhD, John M Bilhorn, PhD, John L Bills, PhD, Arthur Bing, PhD, Frank
S Riordan, PhD, James L Bischoff, PhD, Guy W Bishop, PhD, John W Bishop, PhD,
Marshall D Bishop, Benny Bixenman, Charles Black, PhD, Darvil Black, PhD, Tom
Black, William Black, Larry G Blackburn, Eli W Blaha, PhD, Blair, PhD, Charles
M Blair, Luther Blair, Paul V Blair, PhD, J Warren Blaker, PhD, Dav
Blankenhagen, Nik Blaser, Clyde Blauer, George A Blay, PhD, Wm Blew, Charles
William Blewett, PhD, David Blewett, Claire Bluestein, PhD, Aaron L Bluhm, PhD,
Harold F Bluhm, M Blumenberg, PhD, Jack E Bobek, Thomas C Boberg, PhD,
Sergey Boblcov, Terry Bobo, Jane Bock, PhD, Gary Bockus, Stephen J Bodar, PhD,
Loren E Bode, PhD, George Boder, Robert J Boehle, Eldron Boehmer, J Neil Boger,
MD, Colleen Boggs, Johnny Boggs, Leslie K Bogle, Joseph Terril Bohanon, PhD,
Charles E Boklage, PhD, Nicholas C Bolgiano, PhD, Edward H Bollinger, PhD, A
Bollmeier, James Boltz, Jerry C Bommer, PhD, Stephon T Bond, PhD, Walter D
Bond, PhD, James M Bondi, Susan Boner, Patrick V Bonsignore, PhD, Lewis Book,
Raymond Book, Jerry L Boom, PhD, James Boone, PhD, Lawrence E Boos, PhD,
David Booth, PhD, Hamid Borazjani, PhD, Bordeaux, PhD, Robert Borg, Dan
Borgnaes, PhD, Alex B Borkovec, PhD, William Bornhorst, David Borrownam,
Borsari, William E Bosken, Kenneth J Boss, PhD, Robert Bosshart, PhD, Thomas
Bossler, Howard Bost, PhD, Keith A Bostian, PhD, Steve Boswell, Steven T Boswell,
Askel A Bothner By, PhD, Margurette E Bottje, PhD, William G Bottjer, Edmond
M Bottorff, PhD, Michel Boudart, PhD, John H Boughton, PhD, R K Boutwell, PhD,
Charles A Bower, PhD, John Roy Bower, PhD, John Bowers, Jean A Bowles, PhD,
Lamar D Bowles, Robert E Bowling, PhD, John K Bowman, Lewis W Bowman, PhD,
Robert S Bowman, PhD, Samuel Bowser, PhD, James E Box, PhD, Kevin Boyack,
PhD, James Boyd, Jimmy W Boyd, Philip A Boyd, PhD, Ralph L Boyes, Bozlee,
PhD, Robert G Brackett, PhD, Lawrence G Bradford, PhD, Bruce Bradley, Michael
Bradley, Robert F Bradley, PhD, Robert S Bradley, George Bradshaw, W Newman
Bradshaw, PhD, R Bradt, PhD, Robert Brady, J C Brakensieck, Cynthia R Branch,
William Brandt, PhD, Stanton Braude, PhD, Richard H Braumlich, David Braun,
Jennifer Braun, Kenneth Martin Brauner, PhD, Allan Brause, PhD, Ben Bray, PhD,
Bruce G Bray, PhD, William Breach, Lee Brecher, PhD, Claude E Breed, Ted
Breitmayer, A C Breller, Bart J Bremmer, William Breneman, Harold Brennan,
John P Brennan, Abner Brenner, PhD, J Allen Brent, PhD, John H Bress, Joseph
Breston, PhD, William A Brett, Randolph H Bretton, PhD, Harold W Bretz, PhD,
Charles B Breuer, PhD, James Brewbaker, PhD, Doug Brewer, Gregory J Brewer,
PhD, J R Brewer, Ken N Brewer, Robert N Brey, Robt N Brey, PhD, Edward
Breyere, PhD, Darlene R Brezinski, PhD, P L Thibaut Brian, PhD, Alan G Bridge,
PhD, P M Bridges, Andrew Briedenbach, Claudia Briell, James A Brierley, PhD, Edward M Briggs, James E Briggs, PhD, Robert B Brigham, Mont J Bright Jr, Karen
Brignac, Tom Brignac, Frank Brimelow, Robert Bringer, PhD, Raymond S
Brinkmey, PhD, James Brinks, PhD, Anne M Briscoe, PhD, Mike Briscoe, Paul
Brittain, Michael Brittan, PhD, Michael W Britton, Alfred C Broad, PhD, Hyrum
S Broadbent, PhD, Rainer Brocke, PhD, F S Broerman, Robert W Broge, PhD, Richard K Bronder, Fred A Brooks, Gordon Brooks, ND Brooks, Robert R Brooks, PhD,
Charles O Brostrom, PhD, Robert J Brotherton, PhD, Rick A Brower, Albert L
Brown, PhD, Billings Brown, PhD, Bruce L Brown, Charles Brown, PhD, Christopher J Brown, MD, David Brown, Gerald R Brown, PhD, Henry BR Brown, Henry
S Brown, PhD, Herbert Brown, PhD, James Brown, James M Brown, PhD, Jeremy
J Brown, Larry Brown, Lloyd L Brown, Melvin H Brown, PhD, Murray A Brown,
PhD, Olen Brown, PhD, P T Brown, Richard Brown, Robert B Brown, Robert
Brown, PhD, Robert E Brown, PhD, Roderick B Brown, MD, Ronald Brown, PhD,

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Roy W Brown, William M Brown, PhD, Don Brownfield, Paul Eugene Brubaker,
PhD, Paul L Bruce, Carl W Bruch, PhD, Thomas Bruno, PhD, Kelly W Bruns, Lester G Bruns, PhD, Robert F Burns, PhD, Merlyn A Brusven, PhD, Frederick V
Brutcher, Jr, PhD, Samuel R M Burton, Gary G Bryan, John D Bryan, Tom Bryan,
John M Bryant, Ken Brzozowski, PhD, Russell A Buchanan, Carl Buck, PhD, Edward H Buckley, PhD, Stuart Buckmaster, Donald Buckner, Edsel T Bucovaz, PhD,
Victor Buhrke, PhD, Daniel Bullard, PhD, Ervin T Bullard, PhD, David Bullock,
Walter T Bulson, David Wm Bunch, PhD, Harry D Bunch, PhD, Hallie Flowers
Bundy, PhD, Martin Bunton, James J Burchall, PhD, Daivd Burdeaux, Robert
Burger, Roger C Burggraf, Leonard F Burkart, PhD, E A Burke, Marty Burke, Richard L Burke, PhD, Harold E Burkhart, PhD, David R Burley, PhD, Bryan Burnett,
John N Burnett, PhD, Robert W Burnop, Frank B Burns, PhD, Robt D Burns, PhD,
Mike Burnson, Michael Burrell, Richard S Burrows, PhD, Eddie Burt, PhD, Calvin
C Burwell, John Burwell, Neal Busch, PhD, Rick Buschini, Robert Bush, T Bush,
Edwin F Bushman, David Butler, George B Butler, PhD, James Butler, James L
Butler, PhD, Philip Alan Butler, PhD, Rhendal C Butler, Stan Butt, Thomas A
Butterworth, PhD, Sidney E Buttrill, PhD, Rodney G Butts, P D Bybee, Jr.
Category: C
Wm P Cadogan, PhD, Howard H Cady, PhD, Edward George Caflisch, PhD,
Charles E Cain, PhD, David W Caird, Daniel L Calahan, PhD, Leonard J Calbo,
PhD, A G Caldwell, PhD, Robert E Calhoo, PhD, John Calhoun, Mike Callahan,
Chris Calvert, PhD, William Camerer, Mike Cameron, Frederick W Camp, PhD, Ernest Campaigne, PhD, John D Campanella, Douglas J Campbell, George Campbell,
PhD, Larry Campbell, Milton Hugh Campbell, Warren E Campbell, PhD, Robt D
Campo, PhD, Daniel T Canavan, Zoe Canellakis, PhD, Paul Canevaro, Peter Cannon, PhD, Peter J Canterino, PhD, Manfred Cantow, PhD, Walter Canzonier, Michael E Caplis, PhD, Thomas D Carder, William Thomas Cardwell, Darrel E Cardy,
Harold E Carley, PhD, Dave Carlson, Edward C Carlson, PhD, Lawrence O Carlson,
David W Carnell, E Louis Caron, PhD, Lyle L Carpenter, Robert Carpenter, Thomas
Carpenter, Will D Carpenter, PhD, Brenda L Carr, Edward M Carr, Laura H
Carreira, PhD, Marion M Carrion, PhD, Gilbert C Carroll, MD, J Randall Carroll,
James A Carroll, PhD, John Carroll, PhD, Keith T Carron, PhD, Charles Carson,
PhD, Richard M Carson, Mary E Carsten, PhD, Lynn K Carta, PhD, David L
Carter, PhD, John P Carter, Louise Carter, Mason C Carter, PhD, William Carter,
Louis B Caruana, PhD, Hugh W Carver, James Clark Carver, PhD, Chris Cash,
Armano Casola, PhD, Patrick E Cassidy, PhD, J K Cassil, Stan J Casswell, Neal
Castagoli, PhD, Billy R Catherwood, Renata E Cathou, PhD, Thomas E Catlett,
Robert Lee Caudill, MD, John A Caughlan, Jerry Caulder, PhD, Steven L Cazad,
Rosemary L Centner, Arthur V Chadwick, PhD, Pamela Chaffee, Rowand Chaffee,
PhD, Charles T Chaffin, PhD, Paritosh M Chakrabarti, PhD, Bruce Chamberlain,
David L Chamberlain, PhD, Dilworth W Chamberlain, PhD, Roger S Chamberlin,
RS Chamberlin, Doyle Chambers, PhD, Glen D Chambers, Carroll W Chambiss,
PhD, Sham-Yuen Chan, PhD, Shu F Chan, PhD, Sunney L Chan, PhD, Leonard B
Chandler, PhD, Chung Jam Chang, PhD, Yung Feng Chang, PhD, Bruce R
Charlton, Edward Charney, Andrew J Chase, Thomas J Chastant, Norman
Chatterton, PhD, Brad N Chazotte, PhD, Lynn Chcoran, E Cheatham, Zafarullah
K Cheema, PhD, John Chehaske, Craig F Cheng, K L Cheng, PhD, Thomas C
Cheng, PhD, Wade Cheng, PhD, Kenneth P Chepenick, PhD, Roy Cherris, Arthur
Chester, PhD, Alfred P Chestnut, PhD, Dhan Chevli, PhD, William Chewning, Long
Chi Lee, PhD, Yuen S Chiang, PhD, R Chiarenzelli, David Chilcote, PhD, Ronald
B Child, David T Chin, PhD, Shyamala Chitaley, PhD, John G Chittick, David
Chleck, Ye C Choi, PhD, Frank W Chorpenning, PhD, Robert J Chorvat, PhD, Peter
S Chrapliwy, PhD, Geo A Christenberry, PhD, Alan Christensen, Charles R
Christensen, PhD, Duane Christensen, Kent Christensen, Richard Christensen,
James B Christiansen, PhD, Richard Christiansen, PhD, Robert M Christiansen,
PhD, Warner Howard Christie, PhD, Dennis Christopherson, Alfred L Christy, PhD,
Kenneth G Christy, Jack C Chroy, Donald J Ciappenelli, PhD, Ja Cifonelli, PhD,
Marc Cimolino, PhD, Joseph R Cissell, Edwin Claassen, PhD, Gregory S Claine,
Leroy Clardy, Howard G Clark, PhD, Hugh Clark, PhD, Ian Clark, James Clark,
PhD, Kent Clark, Paul B Clark, Thomas Clark, Duane G Clarke, PhD, John F Gates
Clarke, PhD, Joseph W Clarke, Larry Clarke, Richard H Clarke, PhD, Richard P
Clarke, PhD, Karen Clausen, Don Clauson, Harris Clay, CK Claycomb, PhD, David
Clayton, PhD, Fred Clayton, PhD, Wallace Cleland, PhD, Wm L Cleland, William
M Clement, PhD, W Clift, David Cline, Dennis Cline, Warren K Cline, PhD, David
N Clum, Mike Clumper, Mary Coakley, PhD, Keith H Coats, PhD, W Frank Cobb
Jr, Elmer Lendell Cockrum, PhD, James Codding, Charles W Coe Ii, William D Coe,
Michael Coffman, PhD, Anthony Cofrancesco, PhD, David B Coghlan, Lawrence

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Cohen, Ernst M Cohn, C E Coke, PhD, Gene Louis Colborn, PhD, Edward E Colby,
Avean W Cole, PhD, Clarence R Cole, PhD, Randall K Cole, PhD, Philip J Colella,
Robert Coleman, PhD, William E Coleman, Robt Coley, J R Colgan, MD, Summer
Colgan, Hans Coll, PhD, Donald W Collier, James Collier, PhD, Thomas F Collier,
MD, PhD, Wm B Collier, PhD, Alan Collins, PhD, Frederick C Collins, PhD, Jane
E Collins, William Henry Collins, Wm F Collins, PhD, Carlos A Colmenares, PhD,
Andre Coltrin, Clair R Colvin, PhD, Robert Neil Colwell, PhD, William T Colwell,
PhD, E Keith Colyer, Leon Combs, PhD, John Comeaux, Jack Comeford, PhD, John
Commerford, PhD, Wayne M Compton, John Conconnan, Norman I Condit, F Dee
Conerly Jr, John Conlan, Carter B Conlin, Paul K Conn, PhD, James Connell, John
J Connelly, Wm J Connick, Jr, Roddy Conrad, PhD, Walter E Conrad, PhD, David
L Constans, Thomas W Conway, PhD, Mark Cook, PhD, Addison G Cook, PhD,
Charels Cook, Donald J Cook, PhD, Glenn C Cook, MD, Maurice G Cook, PhD, Melvin A Cook, PhD, Anson R Cooke, PhD, Bingham Cool, PhD, William E Cooley,
PhD, Marguerite W Coomes, PhD, Anne M Cooney, Edward Cooney, George P Cooper, Harry C Cooper, Robert C Cooper, PhD, Thomas Cooper, PhD, A D Copeland,
Harry B Copelin, Frederick A Copes, PhD, Carl Corbit, Stephen Corcoran, Christopher Cordle, PhD, Walter H Corkern, PhD, Kenneth C Corkum, PhD, William E
Cormier, Creighton N Cornell, Stephen W Cornell, PhD, Arlen C Cornett, Holley
Cornette, David G Cornwell, PhD, Deborah A Corridon, Allen Costoff, PhD, Kevin
Cotchen, Wilfred A Cote, PhD, Grant Cottam, Ronald A Coulson, PhD, William H
Courtney III, PhD, Raymond C Cousins, PhD, Fred Covelli, Wm A Cowan, PhD,
John B Cowden, Ronald R Cowden, PhD, Brian Cox, Clifford H Cox, PhD, Donald
J Cox, PhD, Edwin Cox, Frederick Cox, Neil D Cox, PhD, Alan Coykendall, Kenneth
R Coyne, C H Cracauer, John Merrill Craig, R E Craigie Jr, Donald Lee Crain, PhD,
Donald J Cram, PhD, John R Crandall, PhD, Frederick L Crane, PhD, Chris L
Craney, PhD, Richard A Craven, Clara D Craver, PhD, Jonathan Crawford, David
Craymes, Ron Creamer, Buford Creech, Anne E Cress, PhD, Phillip O Crews, PhD,
Diana Creyes, Donald F Crie, Harry N Cripps, PhD, Joseph P Crisler, PhD, Robert
Crist, J L Crittenden, Thomas Bernard Croat, PhD, Charlie Crocker, Luanne S
Crockett, Michael Croft, Robert K Crookston, PhD, Edward Crosby, David Crosley,
Tom Crossman, Kenneth A Crossner, PhD, Gene Autrey Crowder, PhD, Curtis
Crowe, Edwin P Crowell, C Richard Crowther, PhD, Robert H Crowther, Frank C
Croxton, PhD, Richard Cruce, William J Cruice, Edward H Crum, PhD, Cris Cruz,
Richard L Cryberg, PhD, Billy Crynes, Donald F Cue, John R Culbert, Chris Cull,
John S Cullen, Floyd Culler, A S Cullick, PhD, Richard W Cummins, PhD, Lawrence E Cunnick, Howard Cunningham, PhD, Thomas J Curphey, PhD, Ira B Current, William W Currier, PhD, Janet C Curry, John Curry, Maria A Curtin, PhD,
Fred W Curtis, Jr, Chopin Cusachs, PhD, Herman C Custard, PhD, Thomas P
Czepiel, PhD, James Oziomek, PhD, Shannon Czysz.
Category: D
Charles H Daggs, Robert S Dahlin, PhD, Donald Dahlstrom, PhD, Alfred Dakrig,
Glenn I Dale, Harry Dalton, PhD, Michael Daly, George Damon, PhD, Jess Donald
Daniels, PhD, Wayne Daniels, Jerry Danni, S Dantiki, PhD, Morris J Danzig, PhD,
Josephe E Darsey, MD, PhD, Dean Daryani, Hriday Das, PhD, Theodore Dashman,
PhD, Gregory W Daues, T C Dauphine, PhD, Dennis Dautreuil, Moses M David,
PhD, Clayton L Davidson, James Davidson, Thomas Davidson, Harold W Davies,
PhD, Julian A Davies, PhD, Bruce W Davis, PhD, Frances M Davis, PhD, H Turia
Davis, Harriett Davis, Harry Davis, PhD, Kent R Davis, Paul Davis, Ralph Davis,
Raymond Davis, PhD, S Davis, Thomas Davis, PhD, W Kenneth Davis, Wallace
Davis, PhD, John A Davis Jr, PhD, Arthur D Dawson, PhD, David Dawson, Donald
F Day, PhD, Harry G Day, PhD, Michael Day, PhD, R A Day, PhD, William Day,
PhD, Donald W De Jong, PhD, Eugene De Rose, PhD, John Deacon, David L Dean,
PhD, Sheldon W Dean, PhD, Warren E Dean, PhD, Donald Deardorff, PhD, David
W Deberry, PhD, Edward Dale Deboer, Charles Deboisblanc, Francis Debons, PhD,
Wayne Deckert, PhD, Paul Decusati, PhD, Gary Defoti, PhD, Rosalie F DegiovanniDonnelly, PhD, John Dehn, PhD, Eugene Wm Dehner, PhD, Susan Deines, Phillip
Delassus, PhD, William M Delaware, Joe D Delay, PhD, Robert M Delcamp, PhD,
E F Delitala, Jon Delong, Anthony J Delucca, Winston R Demonsabert, PhD, David
Denhardt, PhD, Frank W Denison, PhD, Robert Dennett, Richard Denney, Richard
S Dennis, William E Dennis, PhD, Norman C Deno, PhD, Edmond J Derderian,
PhD, Charles Desbordes, Wm Deskin, PhD, Raymond E Dessy, PhD, R P Destefano,
PhD, William D Detlefsen, PhD, R Deufel, PhD, Marshall E Deutsch, PhD, Robert
M Devlin, PhD, Frederick W Devries, Mel Dewsnup, Jerry J Dewulf, Alan Dexter,
PhD, Cecil M Dinunno, Arthur S Diamond, Marian C Diamond, PhD, John K Dibitz,
Phillip Dick, Richard J Dick, Charlesworth L Dickerson, PhD, Winifred Dickinson,
PhD, Wm B Dickinson, PhD, Dave Dicksor, Henry A Diederichs, MD, Kenneth

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Diesburg, PhD, Jerry A Dieter, PhD, John Dieterman, Alm Dietz, Armand
Digiacomo, PhD, Joseph B Digiorgio, PhD, Ken Dillard, Robert G Dillard, Daniel
Dillon, Ray Dillon, Raymond Dillon, PhD, Raymond Dimartini, PhD, Robert Hudson
Dinegar, PhD, Howard L Dinsmore, PhD, Ronald J Dinus, PhD, William Dinusson,
PhD, R W Dirks, James D Dixon, PhD, Marvin P Dixon, PhD, Elliott Doane, PhD,
Harry D Dobbs, PhD, Carroll Dobratz, PhD, Donald C Dobson, PhD, Gerard Dobson,
PhD, Martin L Dobson, Nama Doddi, PhD, George C Doderer, Richard A Dodge,
PhD, Gerald E Doeden, PhD, Eugene Doering, William A Doerner, PhD, J W Dohr,
Michael F Dolan, Geoffrey E Dolbear, PhD, Wm Read Dolbier, PhD, Bruce J
Dolnick, PhD, John M Domagala, PhD, John M Domagala, PhD, William Donald,
PhD, Gary B Donart, PhD, Henry Donato, PhD, Wenju Dong, PhD, James E
Donham, Susanne Donovan, David Dooley, Thomas P Dooley, PhD, Barbara
Doonan, PhD, Harold E Doorenbos, PhD, Guy H Dority, PhD, Kenneth J Dormer,
PhD, Joe Dotzlaf, Jocelyn Douglas, PhD, Kathleen Douglas, Michael G Douglas,
PhD, Westmoreland J Douglas, PhD, Robert W Douglass, PhD, Spencer Douglass,
John Doull, PhD, Arthur Ostantinos Doumas, PhD, Sandra Dowdell, Roland Downing, PhD, Tom Downs, PhD, William F Downs, PhD, David J Drahos, PhD, Bruce
D Drake, PhD, Michael C Drake, PhD, Jean Draper, Edward A Dratz, PhD, James
Drew, PhD, Larry A Drew, PhD, Harry J Driedger, MD, Albert John Driesch, Gary
L Driscoll, PhD, Margaret Driscoll, Don A Sibley, PhD, James E Drummond, PhD,
Harry V Drushel, PhD, G L Dryden, PhD, Gil Dryden, PhD, C F Duane, Del R M
Dubbs, PhD, E H Dubois, S C Dubios, Leonard Duda, PhD, Patricia M Duda, Thomas J Dudek, PhD, Howard Dudley, Thomas Dudley, Dudt, PhD, Donald J Dudziak,
PhD, C J Duet, Leroy Dugan, PhD, Harold R Duke, PhD, Gary R Dukes, PhD, Peter
P Dukes, PhD, Philip Gordon Dunbar, PhD, Charles L Duncan, PhD, Warren
Dunkel, Larry Dunn, Frederick C Durant III, Mary Durick, James Durig, PhD, John
Durig, Gordon B Durnbaugh, Sophie Dutch, James Duvall, Paul B Duvall, MD, Ernest J Duwell, PhD, James P Dux, PhD, Roger L Van Duyne, PhD, Isaac Dvoretzky,
PhD, Dushan Dvornik, PhD, Francis G Dwyer, PhD, Michael Dwyer, Alan C Dyar,
Clifford Dykstra, PhD, J Robert Dynes, PhD, Philip J Dziuk, PhD.
Category: E
Bertram E Eakin, PhD, James Earle, Thomas Earles, D B Easty, PhD, Philip E
Eaton, PhD, Kenneth Ebel, PhD, Gary Eberly, Floyd Eberts, PhD, DP Ebright, Lawrence T Eby, PhD, Bernard Ecanow, PhD, Carrie Eddy, Charles K Edge, PhD, Janes
M Edgecombe, Robt Edgerton, PhD, John Edgington, Paul Edmiston, PhD, Charlie
Edwards, J Gordon Edwards, PhD, Wm F Egelhoff, PhD, Donald A Eggert, PhD,
Peter Egli, Richard Egly, PhD, William Ehringer, PhD, Dion R Ehrlich, MD, H P
Ehrlich, PhD, Robert Eichelberger, PhD, Paul Eichenberger, Jacob Eichhorn, PhD,
Kendrick R Eliar, PhD, Gary L Eilrich, PhD, Dean W Einspahr, PhD, Kurt F Eise,
J David Ekstrum, Guindy Mahmoud Ismail El, PhD, Dennis Eland, Richard E
Elden, Jack R Elenbaas, James Eley, PhD, Gabriel Elgavish, PhD, Hans Elias, PhD,
Michael J Elkind, Arthur Eller, PhD, Douglas G Elliot, PhD, Alice E Elliott, PhD,
Alice Elliott, PhD, Gary Elliott, Howard C Elliott, PhD, W S Elliott, David A Ellis,
PhD, Everett L Ellis, PhD, Richard J Ellis, PhD, K Donald Ellsworth, Andy Elms,
Sandy Elms, Howard G Elrlich, PhD, Shaker El-Sherbini, PhD, Donald W Emerich,
PhD, Edward Emery, PhD, Philip H Emery Jr, PhD, Matt Emison, John L
Emmerson, PhD, Alvin Engelke, Franz Engelmann, PhD, Charles F Engles, John
Joseph Ennever, DDS, Leonard E Ensminger, PhD, Bruce Enyeart, Richard A
Eppler, PhD, J Michael Epps, MD, Robert Allan Erb, PhD, John K Erbacher, PhD,
William Erby, PhD, John Erdmann, John G Erickson, PhD, Joshua A Erickson,
Klaas Eriks, PhD, Jack Eriksen, Jan Erikson, PhD, Jay A Erikson, PhD, R W
Erwin, Theodore W Esders, PhD, Ramon Espino, PhD, Robert H Essenhigh, PhD,
Daniel Esterline, PhD, John H Estes, PhD, Frances C Esteve, S Etter, Wm Henry
Eustis, PhD, Charles A Evans, PhD, Claudia T Evans, PhD, Howard E Evans, PhD,
Marjorie W Evans, PhD, R Evans, Thomas Walter Evans, PhD, Wm Evans, F Monte
Evens, PhD, Martin E Everhard, MD, PhD, Eugene Eyster, PhD.
Category: F
David R Fagerburg, PhD, Stephen R Fahnestock, PhD, Richard B Lai Fatt, PhD,
James R Fair, Jr, PhD, Dennis A Falgout, PhD, Donald Fancher, PhD, Don
Fanslow, PhD, Farber, Earl Faria, Robert H Fariss, PhD, Charles Farley, Ollie
Farnam, Wells Fransworth, PhD, Michael Farona, PhD, Charles Farrell, PhD, Eugene P Farrell, David Fashimpaur, Gerald Fassell, Arlo W Fast, PhD, Homer D
Fausch, PhD, John R Favorite, Henry A Feddern, PhD, James Fedrich, PhD, Abraham S Feigenbaum, PhD, Harvey L Fein, PhD, Louis Feinstein, PhD, Robert Feisel,
D Feller, PhD, Ronald L Felsted, PhD, Lorie M Felton, Steve Fenderson, Robert W
Fenn, PhD, Donald Fenton, PhD, John Fenton, PhD, WJ Fergerson, Dave D Fer-

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guson, David Ferguson, PhD, John Ferguson, Robert Ferguson, Richard L Ferm,
PhD, William James Ferrell, PhD, Jorge Ferrer, Wm A Fessler, PhD, Dale A Fester,
Edward M Fettes, PhD, H Richard Fevold, PhD, John A Feyk, Herbert J Fick,
Byron D Field, Jack Field, PhD, Ray Field, PhD, Thomas Field, PhD, Tim Figgie,
Prof Roy H Filby, PhD, Theodore H Filer, PhD, Tom Filesi, Warren FilleyFilley,
MD, Charles Richard Finch, PhD, Paul Finkelstein, PhD, Charles Finkl, PhD, Peter
S Finlay, PhD, Frances M Finn, PhD, John M Finn, PhD, James Fiordalisi, PhD,
Bryant C Fischback, Dwayne Fischer, PhD, John Fischley, GL Fish, Wayne W Fish,
PhD, J W Fishback II, Geo H Fisher, PhD, William H Fishman, PhD, Klaus Flach,
PhD, John F Flagg, PhD, Eugene Flaumenhaft, PhD, Charles W Fleischmann, PhD,
Alison Fleming, PhD, Bruce Ingram Fleming, PhD, Julius Fleming, Thomas H
Fletcher, PhD, William Flis, Harold W Flood, David Flowers, G Flowers, PhD, Edward Gotthard Foehr, PhD, Robert R Foil, PhD, John E Folk, PhD, Paul V
Fonnesbeck, PhD, Marc E Fontaine, PhD, Herman Fonteyne, John T Foorley, PhD,
Wilford Foote, PhD, Michael S Forbes, PhD, George E Ford, PhD, J Ford, PhD,
Thoams Ford, PhD, Edmund H Fording, Jr, President, Edward Forest, PhD, Eugene
J Fornefeld, PhD, Albert J Forney, R C Forrester III, PhD, Denis Forster, PhD, Michael Forster, PhD, John Forsyth, PhD, Dennis Fost, PhD, Cy E Foster, D R E M
Foster, PhD, Donald M Foster, PhD, Gerald Foster, PhD, John A Foster, Mac Foster, PhD, Norman C Foster, PhD, Walter E Foster, PhD, Chris Fountain, PhD, Eric
B Fowler, PhD, Frank C Fowler, PhD, Gary D Fowler Jr, Dwaine Fowlkes, Gerald
Fox, J Fox, Michael R Fox, PhD, Neil S Fox, PhD, James J Foy, PhD, Walter J
Frajola, PhD, Roger Frampton, PhD, Guy J Del Franco, Charles E Frank, PhD,
Clifford Frank, R S Frank, Gordon Franke, PhD, Julian Frankenberg, PhD, Neal
E Franks, PhD, Martin S Frant, PhD, Bruce Frantz, Warren L Franz, PhD, Daniel
W Frascella, PhD, Margaret S Fraser, PhD, Nile N Frawley, PhD, R Thomas
Frazee, Randy Frazier, Roger Frazier, Stephen E Frazier, PhD, William R Frazier,
Raymond Frederici, Lloyd R Frederick, PhD, Max Freeland, PhD, James F Freeman, PhD, Reola L Freeman, Kenneth French, PhD, Scott French, Melvin Frenzel,
Arthur L Fricke, PhD, Joe Fiedlander, Raymond Friedman, PhD, H Friedmann,
Herbert C Friedmann, PhD, Dwayne T Friesen, PhD, Charles R Frink, PhD,
Fripiat, PhD, Harry K Fritchman, PhD, Alfred K Fritzche, PhD, Herbert Farley
Frolander, PhD, David Fromson, PhD, U George Frondorf, H R Froning, PhD, Arthur A Frost, PhD, John Frost, PhD, Si Frumkin, Alfred E Fuehs, Robert S
Fulghum, PhD, Forst D Fuller, PhD, Ron Fuller, Robert Fulton, PhD, Dennis L
Funck, PhD, B L Funt, PhD, Francis S Furbish, PhD, R W Furner, Gabriel Fusco,
PhD, John Fuzek, PhD.
Category: G
Sabit Gabay, PhD, Morris Gabel, Richard A Gabel, PhD, Jim Gadwood, Lanelle
G Gafford, PhD, Frederick W Gage, A Gahr, PhD, Tinsley P Gaines, Robt G
Galazin, Louis Galie, James Gallagher, PhD, Joan S Gallagher, PhD, Donald L
Gallaher, Ethan C Galloway, PhD, Darrell Gallup, PhD, Yakob Galperin, PhD,
David Gambal, PhD, James J Gambino, Bernard Wm Gamson, PhD, Harendra S
Gandhi, PhD, Mary C Gannon, PhD, Richard H Garber, PhD, George F Garcelon,
C M Garcia, Wayne Scott Gardner, PhD, Jerry Gargulak, PhD, Clyde H Garman,
Ronald G Garmon, PhD, H Richard Garner, Robt J Garner, Jeanette Garr, PhD,
Thomas M Garrett, PhD, Robert G Garrison, PhD, John E Garst, PhD, Daniel L
Graver, Justine S Garvey, PhD, Todd Garvin, MD, Douglas L Garwood, PhD, Gary
J Gascho, PhD, Jerry Gass, Jay B Gassel, Edward Wm Gassie, PhD, R H Gassner,
A D Gate, George L Gates, Gerald O Gates, PhD, Anthony R Gatti, PhD, Eugene
R Gaughran, PhD, Donald W Gauntlett, Henry T Gawrylowicz, David Gay, Richard
L Gay, PhD, Joseph Gaynor, PhD, Rick D Gdanski, PhD, Roy L Gealer, PhD, Richard Geesey, PhD, Colin V Gegg, PhD, D C Gehri, PhD, Robert F Gehrig, PhD, Perry
J Gehring, PhD, James E Geiger, Paul J Geiger, PhD, Philip Geis, PhD, Celine
Gelinas, PhD, Gennaro, PhD, Joseph C Gentry, Boyd A George, PhD, Raymond
George, PhD, W H Dreme George, Gerard Allen Geppert, Robert Gerger, Earl Robert Gerhard, PhD, George W Gerhardt, PhD, Henry D Gerhold, PhD, TC Gerhold,
Michael Gerkin, Richard P Germann, PhD, Peter J Gerone, PhD, Mark Gerstein,
PhD, Eric Gerstenberger, Joseph E Gervay, PhD, Forrest E Getzen, PhD, Alex
Gezzy, Camillo Ghiron, PhD, Louis Charles Gibbons, PhD, Thomas G Gibian, PhD,
Ken Giebe, Leo Giegzelmann, Frederic A Giere, PhD, Dewayne E Gilbert, PhD,
Garrell Gilbert, Joel Gilbert, Peter Gilbert, William Gilbert, PhD, William Gill, PhD,
Wm R Gillen, Bob Gillespie, Jeff Gillespie, William H Gillespie, Nicholas W
Gillham, PhD, Travis H Gillham, George A Gillies, PhD, T Ja Gilligan, PhD,
Jacques Gilloteaux, PhD, James R Gilman, Ernest R Gilmont, PhD, John Gilmore,
PhD, John H Gilmore, Mark Gindling, Thomas H Giordano, PhD, Georgina Gipson,
Johanna Glacy-Araos, Marvin Glass, Werner Glass, PhD, Clifford Glenn, Donald

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Glenn, John Glissmeyer, John W Glomb, PhD, Richard H Gnaedinger, PhD, Matthew Gnezda, PhD, William Godaif, Ludwig E Godycki, PhD, Frederick A Goellner,
Grayce Goertz, PhD, Thomas Goettge, Eugene Goldberg, PhD, Randy Golding, PhD,
William T Golding, Lionel S Goldring, PhD, Theodore P Goldstein, PhD, Patrick
Goldsworthy, PhD, William Gong, PhD, Ely Gonick, PhD, Tim Good, William Good,
Robert Goodman, Byron Goodrich, John Goodrich, Louie A Goodson, Korwin J Goodwin, John C Goon, V L Goppelt, Martin L Gorbaty, PhD, Milton Gorham, Joseph
Gorsic, PhD, Timothy N Gorski, MD, PhD, Waldemar Gorski, PhD, Howard
Gorsuch, Christopher Gosling, George R Goss, PhD, John R Goss, Albert Gotch,
PhD, George Gott, John Gottschling, Thomas L Gould, PhD, Alan Goulet, John
Graf, Bob Graham, Dee McDonald Graham, PhD, Gary G Graham, PhD, Joseph W
Grahame, Robert E Gramera, PhD, Robert Gramera, PhD, Alphonse P Granatek,
Clark A Granger, PhD, Donald J Grantham, Jurgen M Grasshoff, PhD, Kenneth
Graues, Robert J Graves, Lewis Gray, Michael Gray, PhD, Steven Gray, Frank
Graziano, PhD, Randolph K Greaves, Marvin L Green, Saul Green, PhD, George M
Greene II, PhD, Harold Greenfield, PhD, Gerald A Greenhouse, PhD, Howard E
Greenwell, Robert Griffith, Mike Greger, Charles T Gregg, PhD, David Gregg, David
H Gregg, PhD, Everett D Greinke, David R Gress, Edward L Griffin, Gordon W
Gribble, PhD, Ray H Griesbach, Edward Griest, PhD, Harold L Griffin, Leland Griffin, Durward R Griffith, Roy Griffiths, PhD, Tom Griffiths, Mark Grigsby, PhD,
Paul E Grindrod, PhD, Teddy H Grindstaff, PhD, Ernest E Grisdale, Robert Dwight
Grisso, PhD, Alfred W Grohe, Alan B Grosbach, MD, Joseph F Gross, PhD, Fred
Grosz, PhD, Morris P Grotheer, PhD, Henry M Grotta, PhD, Leonard C Grotz, PhD,
James Robb Grover, PhD, Frank Groves, PhD, Alfred Gruber, David P Gruber, Gerald Wm Gruber, PhD, Gerry Gruber, PhD, Geza Gruenwald, PhD, Paul M
Gruzensky, PhD, Harold J Gryting, PhD, Robert F Guardino, PhD, Terry Guckes,
PhD, Elaine Guenther, Charles G Guffey, PhD, Arnold J Gully, Kenneth H Gum,
Robert C Gunness, PhD, Wolfgang H H Gunther, PhD, Earl S Gurley, Robert J
Gussman, Lyle Gust, Dwight F Gustafson, David L Gustine, PhD, Gerald Gutowski,
PhD, Alvin Guttag, Kelleen Gutzmann, John V Guy-Bray, PhD, Allan Guymon,
PhD.
Category: H
Frederick C Haas, PhD, David S Olomon Hacker, PhD, Elard Haden, Rodney N
Hader, Mark Hagadone, PhD, James Hagan, PhD, C Troy Haggard, Gerow R
Hagstrom, PhD, Anthony Haines, Thomas Haines, PhD, Ben Hajek, PhD, Reino
Hakala, PhD, Arnold Hakkila, PhD, Martha Hale, PhD, Charles Hall, PhD, Ken
Hall, Kenneth L Hall, PhD, Nathan A Hall, PhD, Norm Hall, Phillip Hall, Rebecca
Hall, Sieglinde Haller, John H Hallman, PhD, Donal W Halloran, Kevin Halstead,
Edward E Hamel, PhD, William A Hamill, Gordon A Hamilton, PhD, James W
Hamilton, PhD, Priscilla O Hamilton, PhD, John Hamaker, PhD, Robert M
Hammaker, PhD, Jack A Hammond, Raymond E Hammond, Charles E Hamner,
PhD, Linda C Hamphill, MD, Adrian J Hampshire, Richard O Hampton, PhD,
Suleiman M Hamway, PhD, Diane K Hancock, PhD, Cadet Hand, PhD, John W
Hand, John B Haney, MD, Dallas Hanks, Bill M Hann, George C Hann, Robert B
Hanna, Samuel L Hansard, PhD, Joann B Hansen, PhD, Joann B Hansen, PhD, R
Thomas Hansen, PhD, Steve Hansen, PhD, Rowland Hansford, Harry R Hanson, E
W Hanszen, Michael L Haraczy, James E Hardcastle, PhD, Bryant Hardy, Edgar
Erwin Hardy, PhD, P L Hardy Jr, Sandra Hardy, William Hardy, George B Hares,
PhD, O W Hargrove, Wendell Harkey, Thomas Harkins, Mary L Harmon, Grant H
Harnest, PhD, Paul M Harnsberger, Dean O Harper, PhD, Helen Harper, John D
Harper, John E Harper, Todd Harper, B L Harris, PhD, Ben G Harris, PhD, Joseph
B Harris, PhD, Burton Harrison, Ernest A Harrison, PhD, Francis L Harrison, Elbert N Harshman, PhD, Melissa Hart, Paul Hart, Randall E Hart, Robt D Harter,
PhD, Robert R Hartsough, Nathan L Hartwig, PhD, Nicholas Hartwig, PhD,
Charles R Hartzell, PhD, Clarence C Harvey, Kim L Harvey, John Harville, PhD,
Eldert C Hartwig, PhD, Wm H Harwood, PhD, William L Hase, PhD, Caryl
Haskins, PhD, William J Haslem, James R Hass, PhD, Kirk Hastings, Roger C
Hatch, Herbert J Hatcher, PhD, Robert Haubrich, PhD, James Hauff, Arthur Haug,
PhD, Victor Hauser, PhD, Rudolf M Hausler, PhD, Warren M Haussler, Helga F
Havas, PhD, Robert Havens, Gerald B Havenstein, PhD, Anton J Havlik, PhD, Robert Hawthorne, Fred Hayduk, W P Hayduk, Douglas Hayes, PhD, Michael Hayes,
PhD, Robertm Hayes, PhD, Frank L Haynes, PhD, Kenneth Heacock, Ronald A
Head, PhD, Harold Franklin Heady, PhD, Robert S Hearon, Phillip C Hebert, John
Heckman, PhD, Gregory Hedden, PhD, James H Hedges, PhD, Ross M Hedrick,
PhD, Carl J Heffelfinger, PhD, Roger Heiland, J Heilman, PhD, Ron Heisner, Roger
Heitland, James R Helbert, PhD, Stephen Helbing, Duane Helderlein, David
Helfand, Henry Hellmers, PhD, John Helwig, Bruce C Hemming, PhD, Klaus H

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Hemsath, PhD, Charles A Hen, David E Henderson, PhD, James Henderson, PhD,
Jeannine L Henderson, Jerry Henderson, Kenneth P Henderson, Lavell M Henderson, PhD, Charles Hendricks, Deloy G Hendricks, PhD, John P Hendrickson, Malcolm Hendry, PhD, Shawn Heneghan, PhD, Ernest J Henley, PhD, Jim Hennessy,
Henry W Hennigan, William A Hannigan, Lester A Henning, Gustav Henrich, Jonathan F Henry, PhD, William Henry Jr, Wiley H Henson, Jr, PhD, James Hentges,
PhD, John Frederick Herber, PhD, Lloyd E Herdle, PhD, William L Hergenrother,
PhD, Ronald C Herman, PhD, Robert W Hermsen, PhD, Robert Hern, Sandy Herndon, Ernest C Herrmann, MD, PhD, Zvi Herschman, MD, J Wilson Hershey, PhD,
John William Baker Hershey, PhD, Irwin Herskowitz, PhD, Fred Hertlein III,
Charles H Herty III, PhD, John Herweh, Robert A Herzog, Robert P Heslop, MD,
Eugene Hess, PhD, David A Hessinger, PhD, Norman E Hester, PhD, James V
Hewett, PhD, Robert E Heyden, Heyen, PhD, Ken Hucke, Jack Hickey, Kenneth
Hickey, PhD, David K Hickle, Howard M Hickman, James L Hickman, Karen Hickman, PhD, Donald Hicks, PhD, Harold E Hicks, Michael Hicks, Clarence E
Hieserman, Margaret A Hight, Thomas M Hilderbrand, Robt E Hileman, PhD,
Hilgenberg, Bob Hill, Jack F Hill, PhD, Robert F Hill, Robt M Hill, PhD, W B Hill,
PhD, Carol C Hilton, Larry Hinderager, Barton L Hinkle, PhD, Jack Hinman, PhD,
Roger R Hinshaw, B Hinton, PhD, Tod Hinton, Todd O Hinton, Wiillie L Hinze,
PhD, Arthur Hirsch, PhD, Robt W Hisey, PhD, Donald O Hitzman, Jonathan
Hoadley, Brian G Hoal, PhD, Farrell D Hobbs, Melvin C Hobson, PhD, Robert C
Hochel, PhD, Frederick A Hodge, PhD, Lawrence H Hodges, Albert B Hoefelmeyer,
PhD, Arthur Hoeft, Roger A Hoffman, PhD, Theodore P Hoffman, PhD, Thomas
Hoffman, Edward Hoffmann, Christopher J Hogan, PhD, D Hoiness, PhD, David L
Holcomb, Palmer J Holden, PhD, James Holder, MD, Tammy Holder, Glenn Springs
Holdings Inc, Russell Holland, PhD, David Henry Hollenberg, PhD, David V Holli,
John C Holliman, John H Hollis, Harry L Holloway, PhD, Frank Joseph Holly, PhD,
R W Holman, PhD, Eric Holmes, PhD, Howard Holmes, PhD, William Holmes, H
Duane Holsapple, Don H Holzhei, PhD, Otto A Homberg, PhD, Franklin I Honea,
PhD, John Honeycutt, PhD, Arie L Hoogendoorn, PhD, Kenneth E Hoogs, MD,
James P Van Hook, PhD, Harold H Hopfe, Mike Horan, Sylvester P Horkowitz,
Edwin Hornbaker, PhD, Ewin W Hornung, PhD, Myer G Horowitz, PhD, Lloyd A
Horrocks, PhD, M Duane Horton, PhD, Steve Horton, Donald P Hoster, PhD, Allan
Houanson, Joel Oliver Hougen, PhD, Ralph L Hough, Walter A Hough, PhD, Rodney
T Houlihan, PhD, Wm B House, PhD, James O Houseweart, Riley Housewright,
PhD, Eric Houze, Dwight D Howard, K B Howard, Stephen K Howard, Walter
Egner Howard, PhD, Wm L Howard, Sr, PhD, John Howatson, PhD, George Howe,
PhD, John Howe, PhD, Terry A Howell, PhD, Wesley R Howell, PhD, Fritz Howes,
Ward Howland, David R Howton, PhD, William Hoychuk, Paul J Hoyer, PhD, C
Hoyt, Roger Hrudy, Sung L Hsia, PhD, Hsien-Gieh Sie, PhD, T E Hsiu, PhD, Kuo
Hom Lee Hsu, PhD, Robert Y Hsu, PhD, Calvin Huber, PhD, Don M Huber, PhD,
Arthur E Hubscher, Charlie Huddleston, P M Hudnall, PhD, Larry Hudson, Robt
B Hudson, Fred R Huege, PhD, B Jerry L Huff, PhD, Norman T Huff, PhD, Dennis
Huffaker, James Hufham, PhD, Barry Hugghins, Donald Hughes, PhD, Kenneth H
Hughes, Kenneth J Hughes, Michael Hughes, PhD, Travis Hughes, PhD, Robert
Hughey, Augustine Hull, Philip W Humer, PhD, Allan Humpherys, Ray Eicken
Humphrey, PhD, John G Hundley, PhD, Joseph W Hundley Jr, Douglas Hunt,
George C Hunt, Mack Hunt, Arvel H Hunter, PhD, May Anne Hunter, Dave Hurt,
Samir Hussamy, PhD, Robert Huston, David Hutcheson, PhD, William Hutchins,
James H Hutchinson, PhD, F B Hutto, PhD, Monte L Hyder, PhD, Caryl H Hyland,
PhD, J Walter Hylin, PhD, Wm E Hymans, PhD, Arnold G Hyndman, PhD.
Category: I
Mike Ibarguen, Andrew Iezzi, Donald J Ifshin, Harold Igdaloff, Jon M Igleman,
MD, D Igou, PhD, Donald K Igou, PhD, Charles A Ihrke, PhD, Robert M Ikeda,
PhD, Phillip M Iloff, PhD, Samuel J Ing, MD, Criton S Inglessis, PhD, Criton C S
Inglessis, PhD, Alvin R Ingram, PhD, Alfred Ingulli, Charles G Inman, Ronald S
Inman, William B Innes, PhD, Kaoru Inouye, Lucy Ionas, Roar L Irgens, PhD,
David Irvin, James B Irvine, Philip George Irwin, PhD, Sheldon E Isakoff, PhD,
Martin Isaks, PhD, Teri Isakson, Don L Isenberg, PhD, Robt W Isensee, PhD, E W
Itell, Olga Ivanilova, PhD, James A Ives II, Edwin H Ivey, Kenneth M Izumi, PhD,
Robert A Izydore, PhD, Patrick T Izzo, PhD, Theodore Izzo.
Category: J
Mitchell J Jablons, MD, Bill G Jackson, PhD, Harold L Jackson, PhD, Kingbury
Jackson, Rick L Jackson, MD, Wm John Jacober, PhD, William Jacobi, PhD, Francis
A Jacobs, PhD, Francis A Jacobs, PhD, John C Jacobs, PhD, M L Jacobs, PhD, Richard G Jacobs, Elaine L Jacobson, PhD, Irven Allan Jacobson, Donald F Jacques,

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PhD, Jonah Jaffe, PhD, Mordecai Jaffe, PhD, Kenneth I Rwin Jagel, PhD, Ray
Jaglowski, Albert A Jagnow, Kenneth S Jago, MD, Richard J Jambor, David E
James, PhD, Douglas E James, HS James, Virgil E James, PhD, 154 Johnson Hall,
PhD, Everett Williams Jameso, PhD, Leon Jameton, Jiri Janata, PhD, Donald
Janes, Borek Janik, PhD, Maximo Jante, Frank H Jarke, Kenneth Jarrell, Neldon
Lynn Jarvis, PhD, John P Jastrzembski, Augus W Jaussi, PhD, Lynn Jaussi, Max
Jellinek, PhD, Carol Jenkins, Sean Jenkins, Vernon K Jenkins, PhD, Alfred S Jennings, PhD, Creighton Jensen, PhD, Leeann Jensen, PhD, Marcus M Jensen, PhD,
Randolph A Jensen, Randolph Jensen, Randolph Jensen, Robert Jensen, Thomas
Jensen, PhD, Timothy B Jensen, PhD, Stewart C Jepson, Anthony E Jernigan, Michael W Jezercak, PhD, Charles Joanedis, Joerz, Eileen D Johann, PhD, Timothy
Johans, MD, H William Johansen, PhD, Karl Richard Johansson, PhD, Sune
Johansson, Charles W Johnson, Delmar R Johnson, Donald C Johnson, PhD, Donald
D Johnson, PhD, Donald Johnson, PhD, Frank J Johnson, Fred Johnson, PhD, Frederic A Johnson, PhD, Glenn R Johnson, PhD, I Johnson, PhD, James W Johnson,
PhD, M W Johnson, PhD, Mark A Johnson, Mark Johsnon, Melvin Johnson, PhD,
Ray E Johnson, PhD, Richard D Johnson, PhD, Robert V Johnson, PhD, Rodney B
Johnson, Ronald Johnson, Terrance Johnson, PhD, Terrell K Johnson, Todd Johnson, PhD, William Johnson, Bonnie Johnston, H D Johnston, PhD, Johnston, MD,
PhD, Marshall Johnston, PhD, Matt Johnston, Stephan E Johnston, Stephen A
Johnston, PhD, William D Johnston, PhD, John E Jolley, PhD, Von D Jolley, PhD,
AD Jones, Alan R Jones, PhD, Bill Jones, PhD, Chrisopher Jones, Christopher H
Jones, Frank N Jones, PhD, Jack Jones, PhD, John D Jones, MD, Richard H Jones,
PhD, Taylor B Jones, PhD, Wesley M Jones, PhD, Wilbur C Jones, PhD, Peter E
Jonker, Richard Joos, PhD, Gary Jordan, Robt K Jordan, Richard D Jorgenson,
PhD, Raymond P Joseph, Edward S Josephson, PhD, David Jowett, PhD, D Joye,
PhD, R E Juday, PhD, Joseph M Judge, PhD, Hiram P Julien, PhD, Frederick J
Julyan, PhD, John A Jung, PhD, Eric Jungermann, PhD, Wm A Junk, PhD, D E
Junker, PhD, M L Junker, PhD, James Junkin, Richard Jurgensen, MD, Richard
S Juvet, PhD.
Category: K
Matti Kaaranakari, Joe Kahn, John Kalafut, Norman W Kalenda, PhD, Robert J
Kallal, PhD, Lisa Kalman, PhD, Beth Kalmes, Moses Kaloustain, PhD, Brian D
Kaluzny, Margaret A Kaluzny, Victor V Kaminski, PhD, James M Kampfer, Ronald
R Kamyniski, Antony Kanakkanatt, PhD, Joseph M Kanamueller, PhD, Stanley M
Kanarowski, Bernard J Kane, Noel Andrew Patrick Kane, PhD, William Kane, PhD,
Paul Thomas Kantz, PhD, James H Kanzelmeyer, PhD, Hillel R Kaplan, George
Kapusta, PhD, Larry Kapustka, PhD, Richard D Karkkainen, Paul Karr, PhD, Kenneth S Karsten, PhD, Mark Kaschmitter, John D Kaser, PhD, Charles B Kasper,
PhD, Robert J Kassal, Fellow, PhD, Raymond Kastendiek, Rosalind Kasunick, Williams S Kather, Herbert Katz, Joseph J Katz, PhD, Marvin L Katz, PhD, George
B Kauffman, PhD, Jeffrey M Kauffman, Joel Kauffman, PhD, Thomas Kauffman,
R G Kaufman, PhD, Robert Eugene Kay, PhD, Robert L Kay, PhD, Kazakevich,
PhD, Armen R Kazanjian, PhD, Robt A Keeler, Iris Keeling, Harold M Keener, PhD,
Robert D Keenum, Gerson Kegeles, PhD, Hubert Keily, PhD, Carroll Keim, Jerome
B Keister, PhD, Morris Keith, Ed Kekec, Frederick Keller, PhD, Kenneth F Keller,
PhD, Wm E Keller, PhD, Glen E Kellerhals, PhD, Craig T Kelley, Joseph Kelley,
PhD, John Kellgren, PhD, Craig Kellogg, PhD, Colin M Kelly, PhD, Patrick Kelly,
Raymond Kelly, PhD, W J Kelly, PhD, Frank N Kemmer, George Kemp, John D
Kemp, PhD, Thomas Kenat, PhD, Shawn Kendall, L N Kendrick, Albert J Kennedy,
PhD, John E Kennedy, PhD, William Kennedy, James Kennelley, PhD, Harris
Kenner, Francis T Kenney, PhD, Geo C Kent, PhD, Jim Kent, Michael J Keogh,
PhD, Joyce E Kephart, Donald L Kerr, PhD, Anna M Kerrins, Jesse Keville, Mel
Keyes, PhD, Naaman H Keyser, Donald A Keyworth, PhD, Gregory B Kharas, PhD,
Harold Kidd, PhD, Vincent J Kidd, PhD, Rodney Kiel, Terry Kienitz, Charles Kilgore, Dennis D Kilkenny, Theo D Kimbrough, PhD, Charles O King, PhD, F King,
H H King, PhD, John W King, PhD, Joseph E King, Sanford King, PhD, Charles
Kingrea, PhD, C Louis Kingsbaker, Jerome W Kinnison, Norma A Kinsel, PhD, Stephen C Kinsky, PhD, Ralph C Kirby, Earl Kirk, Clyde A Kirkbride, PhD, Hugh R
Kirkpatrick, Ravi Kiron, PhD, Janet M Kirsch, Paul R Kirsch, Edgar W Kivela,
PhD, Lassi Kivioja, PhD, Bruce H Klanderman, PhD, Amy G Klann, PhD, Miro
Klecka, PhD, Vasilios Kleftis, RR Klein, PhD, W S Klein, Walter B Kleiner, PhD,
Robert E Klenck, MD, Ronald W Klenk, PhD, John Kleyn, PhD, Gary Kline, Robert
Kline, PhD, Roger C Klockziem, PhD, Melvin Klotzman, Anatole A Klyosov, PhD,
Kent Knaebel, PhD, Edward A Knaggs, Stephen Knapp, Terence E C Knee, PhD,
Wiliam Kneebone, PhD, B Kneeland, Tom Knetsley, Maurice Kniceley, James
Knight, Jere D Knight, PhD, James Otis Knobloch, PhD, Charles P Knop, PhD,

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Charles P Knop, PhD, Floyd Marion Knowlton, Gregory D Knowlton, PhD, Christian
W Knudsen Dr, PhD, Chung-Yu Ko, Ian Koblick, Henry Kobsa, PhD, Henry Kobsa,
PhD, Arthur T Koch, PhD, D Koch, PhD, Robert Koch, Tyson Koch, William Koehl,
PhD, Carol R Koehler, F Theodore Koehler, Janice Koehler, Gina L Koenig, Lee E
Koepke, George O Kohler, PhD, James P Kohn, PhD, Frederick C Kohout, PhD,
Randall Kok, PhD, Juha P Kokko, MD, PhD, Kurtis Koll, PhD, Bernard J Kolp,
PhD, Stanley P Koltun, Roger W Kolvoord, PhD, Sam Kongpricha, PhD, Virgil
Konopinski, Anthony Konopka, Dusan Konrad, PhD, David Kooyman, PhD, Charles
B Koons, PhD, Frank Koontz, PhD, John T Kopfle, Bruce D Korant, PhD, Joseph
Korch, Howard Kordes, John Kordosh, N Korens, Edmund C Kornfeld, PhD, Charles
H Korns, PhD, Mary B Korpi, Mary Korpi, Daniel R Kory, PhD, Mark J Koslicki,
Aaron D Kossoy, PhD, Robert Kostelniki, PhD, Robt A Koster, PhD, Eugene George
Kovach, PhD, J L Kovach, PhD, Joseph E Kovacic, Nagy H Kovacs, PhD, Thomas
F Kowalczyk Jr, Paul C Kowallis, Richard A Kowalsky, John N Kraeuter, PhD, E
H Krafft, Richard Kraft, Jerry Kraim, PhD, John J Krajewski, PhD, Deborah J
Krajicek, Karl J Kramer, PhD, Karl W Krantz, PhD, Jan Krason, PhD, Clyde H
Kratochvil, MD, PhD, Robert Krauss, PhD, Arthur A Krawetz, PhD, Arthur
Krawetz, PhD, Herman F Kraybill, PhD, John Krc Jr, Lawrence Krebaum, PhD,
Ron Kreis, PhD, Carl Krespan, PhD, Joseph Z Krezandski, PhD, Roy Krill, Kevin
Krist, PhD, Steve Kristoff, PhD, Mark S Kristy, MD, William G Krochta, PhD, Lillian A Kroenke, William J Kroenke, PhD, Rober Lee Kroodsma, PhD, John L Kropp,
PhD, Julius R Kroschewsky, PhD, Philip M Krueger, PhD, Paul H Krumrine, PhD,
Lorin R Krusberg, PhD, David J Kubicek, Donald Gene Kubler, PhD, Mitsuru
Kubota, PhD, S Kubow, PhD, John F Read Kuc, PhD, James E Kuder, PhD, Marc
Kudla, Donald Kuehl, Adelheid Kuehnle, PhD, George Kugler, PhD, Eugene J
Kuhajek, PhD, Moira Kuhl, Michael Kuhlmann, Raymond E Kuhn, PhD, Kenneth
Kuiken, PhD, Eugene Kulesza, Rudolph K Kulling, PhD, Samar Kundu, PhD,
George W Kunze, PhD, Jing-Wen Kuo, PhD, James R Kuppers, PhD, David W
Kurtz, PhD, Henry Kurusz, Peter Kusel, PhD, Andrew Kuzmission, Lydiane Kyte.
Category: L
Peter Labosky, PhD, R G Lacallade, Rosemary Lacher, Sanford Lacks, PhD, Joseph T Laemmle, PhD, Franklin Laemmlen, PhD, Robert J Laffin, PhD, Evan D
Laganis, PhD, Thomas W Lagrelius, MD, B D Lagrone, Michael L Laird, Jerry
Laman, Allen B Lamb, Allen Lamb, Donald J Lamb, PhD, Roger Lamb, John P
Lambert, Andrew Lambie, John P Lambooy, PhD, Trevor G Lamond, PhD, David
L Lamp, Richard J Landborg, PhD, Wm C Landgraf, PhD, Jerome Lando, PhD, L
Landry, William G Landry, Carl L Lane, PhD, Charles J Lane, George Lane, Robert
Lane, PhD, Robt Lane, PhD, Scott Lane, Conrad M Lang, PhD, Robert Carl Lange,
PhD, Paul B Langford, PhD, Philip G Langley, PhD, H Norbert Lanners, PhD, Edward Lanser, Frank M Lanzafame, PhD, Lanzafame, PhD, Evelyn P Lapin, PhD,
Daivd Larsen, Elisabeth Larsen, Eric B Larsen, PhD, Eric Russell Larsen, PhD,
Howland A Larsen, PhD, Lloyd Larsen, PhD, Robert P Larsen, PhD, Ashley Larson,
Bruce L Larson, PhD, Charles Conrad Larson, PhD, Dana E Larson, Kenneth
Larson, Philip Larson, PhD, Reginald M Lasater, Jack S Lasky, PhD, Andrew
Lasslo, PhD, Alan R Latham, PhD, P R Latour, PhD, Robert P Lattimer, PhD,
Duane E Lau, Lloyd H Lauerman, PhD, Robert J Laufer, PhD, Wm E Laupus, MD,
Robert Laurence, PhD, Jim Lauria, Thomas Lauterio, PhD, Marcel E Lavoie, PhD,
Layle Lawrence, PhD, Eugene J Lawrie, Richard Lawson, Jeffrey C Lawyer, William A Laycock, PhD, Norman Lazaroff, PhD, Gerald R Leather, PhD, Bill Lech,
Richard V Lechowich, PhD, Harvey D Ledbetter, PhD, Joseph Ledbetter, PhD,
Brian W Lee, PhD, D M Lee, David J Lee, Donald Lee, PhD, William Lee, PhD,
Clark Leedy, PhD, James L Leef, PhD, Keith Leese, Bob Lefelar, Robert A Lefever,
PhD, Harold Legate, Jim Lehmann, David Leibman, Richard Leicht, Algird G Leiga,
PhD, Joshua M Leise, PhD, Paul Leithart, MD, Vicoria M Leitz, PhD, W L Lemon,
MD, Ronald C Lenox, PhD, Ronald S Lenox, PhD, Joseph W Leone, Bruno Leonelli,
Joseph Leonelli, PhD, Gregory S Leppert, PhD, Dennis Leppin, David M Lesak, Jim
Leslie, Howard Lessoff, Gregory S Lester, Elma Laterman, PhD, Benjamin S Leung,
PhD, Allan L Levey, Karen N Levin, S Benedict Levin, PhD, Bernard Levine, PhD,
Sidney B Levinson, Louis Leviticus, PhD, Seymour Levy, Stanley S Levy, PhD, Robert M Lewert, PhD, Gordon D Lewis, PhD, Milton Lewis, PhD, Peter A Lewis, PhD,
Robert Lewis, Russell J Lewis, PhD, William Lewis, PhD, Chia-Yu Li, PhD, Wei Li,
David Licht, Irwin A Lichtman, PhD, Charles G Liddle, DVM, William Liddle, Timothy E Lien, Steven C Limke, James C Lin, PhD, Merlin Lindemann, PhD, Henry
R Linden, PhD, Wm T Lindsay, PhD, Lindeman, Milton J Linevsky, PhD, Bernard
A Link, PhD, Donald Linn, PhD, Glenn Liolios, William G Lipke, PhD, Michael
Lipton, PhD, Emil P Lira, PhD, Adam Lis, PhD, Wm E Liss, Ellen K Lissant, PhD,
Kenneth J Lissant, PhD, Bruce A Lister, Mark Lister, PhD, Jim Litchfield, Arthur

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Litheredge, Frank Little, Frank Little, Fred Liu, PhD, John Liutkus, PhD, Harold
Lloyd, Vern Lloyd, Fred P Lobban, Gene M Lobrecht, Charles Lochmuller, PhD,
Royce Z Lockart, PhD, Krystyna Locke, PhD, Raymond K Locke, William Lockett,
Eric Lodewijk, Eric Lodewyk, Alfred R Loeblich III, PhD, Robert Loffredo, PhD, R
Loftfield, John T Loftus, Charles B Loggie, Thomas J Loginess, Francis M Logullo,
PhD, H Y Loken, PhD, Stanley J Lokken, PhD, Earl E Long, John Long, PhD, Joyce
M Long, Justin T Long, PhD, William H Long, PhD, John B Longenecker, PhD,
Martin S Longmire, PhD, Ian S Longmuir, Paul A Lan Longwell, PhD, Ruskin
Longworth, PhD, Jerome J Looker, PhD, Herb Lopatka, W F Loranger, PhD, Thomas A Loredo, Jerry A Lorenzen, PhD, Larry Lortscher, Robert A Loscher, Edward
T Losin, PhD, Mark J Losset, Peter F Lott, PhD, Doug Loudin, Gerard A Loughran,
L Hh Louis, PhD, Jerry Loupee, Ben Lovell, Harold L Lovell, PhD, John R Lovett,
PhD, Jan Lovy, PhD, Mark Lowell, PhD, Umass Lowell, PhD, Douglas Lowenhaupt,
JM Lowenstein, PhD, G A Lowerts, PhD, Charles B Lowrey, PhD, Justin Lowry,
Kenneth J Little, Kathleen M Lucas, Wm R Lucas, PhD, Donald H Lucast, PhD,
Peter J Lucchesi, PhD, William Luce, PhD, George W Luckey, PhD, TD Luckey,
PhD, Richard R Ludlam, C T Ludwig, H Ludwig, Oliver G Ludwig, PhD, Ralph E
Luebs, PhD, C Luger, Scott Lugibihl, Caroline N Luhta, Carl A Lukach, PhD, Thomas J Lukas, PhD, Forrest Luke, Robert M Lukes, PhD, Rufus Lumry, PhD, Douglas
E Lund, PhD, R Dwayne Lunsford, PhD, Owen R Lunt, PhD, John H Lupinski,
PhD, Channing Lushbough, PhD, Carol J Lusty, PhD, Walter Wilhelm G Lwowsk,
PhD, Arthur Lyall, A Lvin H Lybeck, John Lydic, Thomas L Lye, Sidney Lyford Jr,
PhD, W R Lyman, Rodney G Lyn, PhD, Keith D Lynch, PhD, William S Lyon, Harold Lyons, PhD.
Category: M
E Jerome Maas, PhD, Brian W Macarthur, PhD, Howard Maccabee, PhD, Bruce
Macdonald, Digby D Macdonald, PhD, Michael J MacDonald, MD, PhD, P
MacDougall, PhD, Robert M MacFarlane, Robert J Macher, Roy P Mackal, PhD,
Bruce Macke, Joseph E MacMillan, PhD, Patrick K Macy, David A Madden, Scott
E Maddox, Steve Maddox, Kenneth O Madsen, PhD, Raymond A Madson, Robert
E Mady, John M Maerker, PhD, Charles A Magarian, Jules J Magda, PhD, John
L Magee, Thomas Magee, Wm T Magee, PhD, Jerry Magloughlin, PhD, Om Prakash
Mahajan, PhD, Kent Ira Mahan, PhD, Hugh D Maillie, PhD, Robert D Mair, PhD,
J Malcom, Robert T Maleeny, Hans Weil-Malherbe, PhD, Jim Gorden Malik, PhD,
Irving Malkin, James L Maller, PhD, D James J O Malley, PhD, Frank B Mallory,
PhD, Joseph D Mallory, MD, Norman Malm, PhD, Tom Maloney, Joseph T Maloy,
PhD, Robert Malstrom, PhD, Eugene Maltzeff, Edward Mancilla, Dorinda Mancini,
Naga B Mandava, PhD, Baldev S Mangat, PhD, Frank D Mango, PhD, J David
Manley, John D Manley IV, Warren O Manley, Kenneth G Mann, PhD, Francis
Manning, PhD, Terry Manning, Sven Peter Mannsfield, PhD, Robt Mansell, PhD,
Lee A Mansfield, Richard Mansfield, Greayer Mansfield-Jones, PhD, John R
Manspeaker, John Manthey, Ronald Manus, PhD, Karl Maramorosch, PhD, L Frank
Maranville, PhD, Gladys M Marcelli, PhD, Robert P Marchant, R Marcotte, PhD,
Herman L Marder, PhD, Anthony Maresca, PhD, Brian Maridon, Michael J
Marinak, Dan Marinello, Andrew C Marinucci, PhD, Michael Markels Jr, PhD, Jay
G Marks, PhD, Paul Marnell, PhD, Dennis N Marple, PhD, Anthony D Marques,
David Marquis, PhD, Marilyn Marquis, PhD, Thomas Marrero, PhD, Henry L
Marschall, Sullivan Marsden, PhD, Wm Michael Marsh, A E Marshall Jr, Christopher R Marshall, PhD, Eugene Marshall, Harold G Marshall, PhD, Thomas E
Marshall, PhD, David E Marshburn, MD, Roger W Marsters, PhD, Richard G
Martella, Edward S Martin, PhD, Jack Martin, PhD, James W Martin, Michael
Martin, PhD, Neils Martin, PhD, Peter M Martin, Ralph Martin, Richard Martin,
PhD, Robert Martin, PhD, Scott Martin, Stanley Martin, T Scott Martin, Willard
Martin, PhD, Francisco J Martinez, Robert A Martinez, Eric Martz, PhD, Carmine
Mascoli, PhD, Jerzy Maselko, PhD, Louis T Mashburn, PhD, Thompson A
Mashburn, PhD, Charles E Mason, PhD, Donald F Mason, PhD, Perry S Mason,
PhD, Richard R Mason, PhD, Williams Mason, Lenita C Massey, MD, John L
Massingill Jr, PhD, M Masthay, PhD, R Mastracchio, Joseph J Matarelli, William
H Matchett, PhD, Robert Matejka, Walter K Mathews, PhD, Thomas W Mathewson,
Robert J Mathieu, Mike Matis, David Mattthew, Charles Sedwick Matthews, PhD,
Donald Matthews, Kenneth D Matthews, Charles Mattina, PhD, Guy C Mattson,
PhD, Samuel A Matz, PhD, George T Matzko, PhD, Augustin D Matzo, Ralph W
Maughan, Margaret N Maxey, MD, PhD, M J Maximovich, PhD, Arthur R Maxwell,
PhD, Marion S Mayer, PhD, Theodor Mayer, PhD, Greg Mayes, Roger Mayhew,
David F Maynard, PhD, Donald R Mayo, PhD, Ernst Mayr, PhD, Siegfried T Mayr,
PhD, James Mayrath, PhD, David Mays, PhD, Larry Mayton, Robert R Mazer, S
Mazil, PhD, G Mazis, John R McBride, PhD, Joseph J McBride, PhD, Ed Mccabbe,

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William D McCain Jr, PhD, Russell F McCann, Wm M McCardell, Danny W McCarthy, PhD, Glenn J McCarthy, Joseph F McCarthy, Niel McCarthy, PhD, Richard
McCarthy, Richard McCarthy, Morley G McCartney, PhD, Clark W McCarty, PhD,
Daniel G McChesney, PhD, James K McClanahan, Neil McClellan, Thomas
McClelland, Chester M McCloskey, PhD, Marvin McClung, PhD, Jack L McClure,
William Owen McClure, PhD, J R McCord, PhD, Joe M McCord, PhD, Rayford L
McCoy, Philip G McCracken, PhD, K E McCready, Terry W McCreary, PhD, Donald
A McCrimmon, PhD, Kevin Mccrory, George McCullars, MD, PhD, John Price
McCullough, PhD, Kilmer S McCully, MD, PhD, John Dennis McCurdy, PhD, Harry
C McDaniel, Ivan N McDaniel, PhD, Max Paul McDaniel, PhD, William D
McDaniel, C McDaniels, David A McDevitt, Floyd McDonald, John McDonald, PhD,
Lynn D Mcdonald, PhD, Mickey McDonald, Ted McDonald, PhD, Leslie M
McDonough, PhD, Robert I McDougall, PhD, Edward McDowell, PhD, Thomas D
Mcdowell, PhD, Wilbur B McDowell, PhD, Jennifer McDuffie, PhD, Paul McElfresh,
PhD, Paul McElligott, PhD, Robert McElroy, J W Mcfarland, PhD, Omer H McGee
Jr, Bill Mcgowan, PhD, Daniel McGuire, Mark McGuire, PhD, Stephen E McGuire,
PhD, Lawrence Mchargue, PhD, Kenneth L McHugh, PhD, Charles G McKay, Roy
McKay, William D McKee, PhD, Curus Milo McKell, PhD, William J McKenna,
John J Mcketta Jr, PhD, Floyd McKinnerney, Michael Mckinney, PhD, Jerry
McKnight, Stephen McKown, D McLain, PhD, Jerry D Mcmahon, Curtis J McMinn,
Bryce H McMullen, PhD, Wilfred Mcmurphy, PhD, Ruth D McNair, PhD, Steve
McNeely, PhD, William McNeill, PhD, Jasper L McPhail, MD, Clinton M McPherson, PhD, Richard McPherson, Robert Mcpherson, L D Mcqueen, PhD, Larry G
McRae, PhD, Fred McSavis, PhD, C L McSpadden, Harry A McVeigh, PhD, David
McVey, PhD, George W Mead, Robert C Meaders, Dean Meadows, Susan L Mearns,
PhD, Alan J Mechtenberg, Richard Y Meelheim, PhD, E K Megerle, George H
Megerle, Lester Meidenbauer, Dale J Meier, PhD, Jimmy Meier, Walter T Meinert,
Norman A Meinhardt, PhD, Clifford L Meints, PhD, Merlin Meisner, Peter D Meister, PhD, George W Melchior, PhD, Robert F Rederick Meldau, Rodney Melgard,
James R Mellberg, Bohdan Melnyk, Henry P Meloche, PhD, Daniel T Meloon, PhD,
James R Melton, PhD, Jerry Melton, Robert S Melville, PhD, Ken Melybe, George
D Mendenhall, PhD, Steven Menkus, Robert B Meny, Carl S Menzies, PhD, Alan
C Merchant, MD, Paul B Merkel, PhD, Robert Mermelstein, PhD, John Lafayette
Merriam, Ronald Merrill, PhD, Charles P Merrimen, PhD, Seymour Merrin, PhD,
Allen Merritt, PhD, Henry N Merritt, PhD, Mark B Merritt, Robt E Merritt, Ross
A Merritt, F P Mertens, PhD, Karen Mertins, Paul Louis Merz, PhD, Calvin D
Messesmith, PhD, James Metcalf, Dean Metter, PhD, T Metzgar, PhD, Edmond G
Meyer, PhD, Frederick G Meyer, PhD, Richard C Meyer, PhD, Robert Meyer, PhD,
Earl L Meyers, PhD, Joseph N Miale, Edwin Michael, PhD, Wm E Michael, Wayne
Michaelchuck, Nicholas Michaels, PhD, Lawrence A Michel, Lloyd R Michels, PhD,
Therese Michels, PhD, David Michelson, M B Mick, Tim K Mickey, Duane S
Mikkelsen, PhD, Douglas G Mikolasek, PhD, Daniel W Miles, PhD, William Miles,
PhD, Otto Mileti, Richard James Millard, Alan Millen, Alan D Miller, PhD, Daniel
Newton Miller, PhD, David R Miller, PhD, David W Miller, Dennis Miller, Dick Miller, PhD, Foil A Miller, PhD, Gail Miller, Gene Miller, PhD, Harold W Miller, James
L Miller, PhD, Joseph H Miller, PhD, Larry Miller, Laura S Miller, Lawrence Miller, Lee Miller, Leslie T Miller, R Miller, PhD, Richard Miller, Robert C Miller, PhD,
W Jack Miller, PhD, William Knight Miller, PhD, Spencer R Milliken, PhD, Ira K
Mills, PhD, Jack Mills, PhD, Norman T Mills, Robert M Milton, PhD, Bryant A
Miner, PhD, Robert S Miner, Jr, PhD, Thomas Miranda, PhD, Nawin Mishra, PhD,
A Mishulovich, PhD, Ben G Mitchell, G C Mitchell, Patricia Mitchell, William W
Mitchell, PhD, Arup P Mitra, Perry J Mixon, Gerald J Mizejewski, PhD, Julie A
Mobley, John E Mock, PhD, Gabor Mocz, PhD, H Walter Moeller, Henry Moeller,
PhD, James Moeller, William R Moeller, Marvin J Mohlenkamp, PhD, Jesse
Mohrbacher, Javid Mohtasham, PhD, Albert J Moll, PhD, Jacob T Moll, MD, Kenneth Molly, Leo Monaghan, Mahmoud Abdel Monem, PhD, D Manos, Larry S Monroe, PhD, Harold Gene Monsimer, PhD, Al Montgomery, Gerald Montgomery, Monty
Montgomery, David C Moody, PhD, Marcia Moody, PhD, Scott M Moody, PhD, Joan
M Moore, Larry W Moore, PhD, Leonard O Moore, PhD, Richard Moore, PhD, Richard N Moore, Roger Moore, Tom D Moore, Walter C Moore, Peter T Mora, PhD,
Ralph Moradiellos, Alice Moran, PhD, Moran, PhD, Ramon Morano, Timothy A
Morck, PhD, George S Morefield, Dave Morgan, Lucian L Morgan, Paul Morgan,
Stanley L Morgan, Thomas K Morgan, PhD, William T Morgan, PhD, David L
Mork, PhD, Robert Morley, PhD, P H Mormile, Antonio Moroni, PhD, Paul H
Morphy, Howard A Morris, PhD, John Morris, PhD, M C Morris, PhD, Paul Morris,
PhD, Perry Morris, Robert Morris, Robert Morris, William E Morris, M E Morrison,
PhD, Morrison, PhD, O Charles Morrison, Morrow, PhD, Wm S Morrow, PhD,
George Morse, Jerome G Morse, PhD, Joe Mortensen, Richard F Mortensen, PhD,

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Raymond L Morter, DVM, PhD, Perry Morton, PhD, Susan Morton, T R Morton,
Wayne Morton, Jacob Mortvedt, PhD, Thomas Moseley, Melvyn W Mosher, PhD,
John R Mosley, PhD, Ronald J Mosso, Eldridge M Mount, PhD, Eldridge M Mount
III, PhD, Charles F Mowry, Lee W Mozes, PhD, Walter J Mozgala, Barbara
Mroczkowski, PhD, Richard C Much, Rosa M C Muchovej, PhD, Gordon M Muchow,
PhD, Wim L Mueller, Robert Z Muggli, PhD, Francis Mulcahy, PhD, Jim Mullen,
L Muller, Dennis M Mulvey, PhD, Dennis Mulvey, PhD, Karen E Mumm, T
Munasinghe, PhD, David Munn, PhD, Dan Muno, Emil Moise Murad, Craig B
Murchinson, PhD, Pamela W Murchinson, PhD, Fenoi Murdock, PhD, Stephen K
Murdock, Richard C Murgittroyd, Robert S Murphey, PhD, Alexander J Murphy,
PhD, Daniel B Murphy, PhD, John Murphy, PhD, Francis J Murray, PhD, James
T Murrell, PhD, J Muse, PhD, James R Musick, PhD, R Musselman, PhD, Walter
F Muzacz, Thomas J Muzik, PhD, John Mycroft, PhD, Clifford A Myers, Earl E
Myers, PhD, Gerald B Myers, MD, Lyle L Myers, PhD, Ronald F Myers, PhD, Victor
Mylroie, Thomas L Myron, Norbert R Myslins, PhD, Charles H Myslinsky.
Category: N
Robert Naegele, PhD, Danny Naegle, Kenneth A Nagy, PhD, Yathi Naidu, PhD,
Gangadharan V M Nair, PhD, John D Nalewaja, PhD, Eugene Malinowksi, PhD,
Robert K Nance, Richard Narske, PhD, Ruth Naser, Roger D Nass, John Nasser,
Roger Natzke, PhD, James K Neathery, PhD, Kenneth H Nebel, John E Nebergall,
Daniel W Nebert, MD, Dana Neely, James W Nehls, PhD, Thomas Neil, PhD, Robert Overman Nellums, George Nelms, PhD, Charles A Nelson, PhD, Errol Nelson,
George D Nelson, R T Nelson, Richard D Nelson, Ronald Nelson, Stephen Nelson,
Melodee Nemeth, Jerry E Nendon, A David Nesbitt, Ray B Nesbitt, Stanley
Nesheim, Lowell E Netherton, PhD, Arthur Nethery, PhD, Joseph Navin Neucere,
Harry J Neumiller Jr, PhD, Edward F Neuzil, PhD, Martin Newcomb, PhD, Roger
Newell, PhD, John M Newey, Marlyn Newhouse, PhD, H Newsom, PhD, Geo S
Nichols, PhD, Marcella Nichols, Richard A Nichols, PhD, Robert Fletcher Nickerson,
PhD, Michael Nicol, Paula W Nicola, Dennis A Nie, James Niebaum, Edmund L
Niedzielski, PhD, R Nieffenegger, Donald R Nielsen, PhD, John Merle Nielsen, PhD,
Ronald A Nielsen, DDS, Joseph A Nieroski, John Tse Tso Ning, PhD, George
Niznik, PhD, Christopher P Nizzi, Ella Mae Noffsinger, Jim Noffsinger, PhD, Daniel
Nogales, PhD, Edward J Nolan, PhD, Martin Nolan, Wayland Noland, PhD, Leo A
Noll, PhD, James A Nollet, Henry F Nolting, Henry F Nolting, David B Norby,
Peter J Nord, PhD, Carroll R Norden, PhD, Ivan Nordin, PhD, Randy Noriyuki, Edward D North, PhD, L D Northcott, Dexter B Northrop, PhD, Scott H Northrup,
PhD, Lilburn L Norton, PhD, Robert Norton, S H Norton, PhD, Wm T Norton, PhD,
Susan Norwood, Thomas E Noseworthy, James A Novitsky, PhD, Robert Novy, PhD,
Leonard James Nugent, PhD, Wm R Nummy, PhD, Ann T Nunnemaker, Frank Q
Nuttall, MD, PhD, William E Nutter, PhD.
Category: O
Harold Oatfield, Gerald OBannon, PhD, Richard D Obarr, PhD, Donald Oberleas,
PhD, Thomas W Obrien, PhD, John L Occolowitz, David Odde, PhD, George
Odoherty, PhD, Vencil O Donnell, John A Oeffner, Carl Oelze, Charles P Ofarrel,
PhD, Marvin L Oftedahl, PhD, Naomi N Ogimachi, PhD, Pearl R Ogle, PhD, David
J Ogren, Richard Oldack, Geo A Oldham, Bernie D Oliver, Kelly H Oliver, PhD,
Lawrence Oliver, PhD, E Jerry Oliveras, Edwin A Olson, PhD, Mark Olson, Robert
J Olson, Joanne M Ondrako, PhD, Wm D E Oneill, PhD, Anatoli Onopchenko, PhD,
Joseph W Opie, PhD, Peg Opolski, Roger Orcutt, PhD, Stephen Orcutt, Fernando
Ore, PhD, Errol Orebaugh, PhD, Gus G Orphanides, PhD, Demetrius G Orphanos,
PhD, David A Orser, Ernest Orsi, PhD, Gary Orvis, Osborn, W E Osborne, Bert
Osen, Maurice J Osman, Dave Osterhout, William Osterloh, PhD, Dan Ostlind,
PhD, Prosper Ostrowski, Robert Otham, Edward OToole, PhD, Haruko Otoshi, Michael J Otto, PhD, Augustua C Ouano, PhD, G Out, PhD, Mack Overton, Dennis
Owen, James R Owen, PhD, Terrence Owen, PhD, A D Owings, PhD, Oyelola, PhD,
Jim L Ozbun, PhD.
Category: P
Gilbert Pacey, PhD, C Subah Packer, PhD, Richard Milton Paddison, MD, Algred
Pagano, PhD, David S Page, PhD, Joseph R Pagnozzi, Ruth Painter, Felice Charles
Palermo, Jay Palmer, PhD, John D Palmer, PhD, Timothy T Palmer, PhD, Muriel
S Palmgren, PhD, Gyan S Pande, PhD, V N Pandey, PhD, Jack S Panze, Andreas
M Papas, PhD, Joseph Papenfuss, PhD, James Pappas, Hemant B Parikh, Edward
James Parish, PhD, Richard L Parish, PhD, Gerald M Park, Robert Park, PhD, William Park, Cyril Parkanyi, PhD, David Parker, George Parker, Nina Parker, PhD,
T Parker, Thomas Parker, R M Parkhurst, Robert Parkhurst, Arthur Parks Sr, H
L Parks, Lloyd M Parks, PhD, James Floud Parr, PhD, Stephen L Parrott, PhD,

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Robert W Parry, PhD, Michael L Parsons, PhD, Alice B Parsons, Stuart Parsons,
Ralph E Pasceri, PhD, Mark Pastore, Robert Patarcity, Charlie Patchett, H Richard
Pate, Mitchell Pate, Kirit Patel, Mangal Patel, Natu C Patel, P V Patel, PhD, Richard Paterson-Jones, James H Patrick, Gaylord P Patten, PhD, James C Patterson,
James H Patterson, PhD, Roe Patterson, Sharon Patterson, Timothy Patterson, Wilbur I Patterson, PhD, James W Patton, PhD, Rolf Paul, PhD, Craig L Paulsen, Patricia Paulson-Ehrhardt, Albert Pavlic, PhD, Paul Pawlisch, PhD, Barry Payne,
Dewitt A Payne, PhD, James Payne, PhD, Raymond A Paynter, PhD, Andy Peabody, Val E Peacock, PhD, Albert M Pearson, PhD, Anthony Pearson, PhD, Earl
Pearson, PhD, F G Pearson, PhD, Doug Pease, Richard S Peckham, PhD, Richard
Pedersen, Floy Pelletier, PhD, Floy Pelletier, PhD, Hugo Gabriel Pena, PhD, David
Pendery, Stanley J Penkala, PhD, Mary A Penland, Robert Pennak, PhD, Charles
R Penquite, Jeffrey G Penta, Wendell Pepperdine, PhD, Armand B Pepperman,
PhD, J Percha, Luzviminda K Peredo, MD, James M Perel, PhD, Arthur S Perkins,
FM Perkins, Thomas Perkins, PhD, Bill Perry, George Perry, PhD, John E Perry,
Mikhail I Petaev, PhD, Douglas Peters, Elroy Peters, PhD, Raymond Peters, Joseph
C Petersen, PhD, Al Peterson, Arthur W Peterson, David Peterson, PhD, Raymond
W Peterson, Peter P Petro, PhD, George Petrosky, Thomas G Petrulas, Heriberto
Petschek, Lawrence M Pfeffer, PhD, Douglas R Pfeiffer, PhD, Glenn Pfendt, Donald
Pfittsiher, Robert Phalen, PhD, Tuan Duc Pham, PhD, Raj Phansalkar, PhD, George
C Phelps, B Phillips, PhD, C Eric Phillips, Calvin Phillips, Dwayne Phillips, Ernest
Phillips, John Phillips, John Phillips, Keith Phillips, Mitchel Phillips, MD, Steven
J Phillips, MD, Wendell F Phillips, Wallae C Philoon, PhD, Cu Phung, PhD, George
J Piazza, PhD, Perry T Piccard, Max Pickerill, PhD, Sean Piecuch, Matthew Lee
Pierce, PhD, Susan K Prierce, PhD, Edwin T Pieski, PhD, Charles E Pietri, William
J Pietrusiak, Arthur J Pignocco, PhD, D Pigott, PhD, Charles Pike, Paul E
Pilkington, Vincent J Pileggi, PhD, Laurence O Pilgeram, PhD, Hyman Ira Pilgrim,
PhD, David Pimentel, PhD, Bob Pinner, Anton J Pintar, PhD, William R Pioli, Michael R Piotrowski, PhD, Bernard Wallace Pipkin, PhD, Anthony W Pircio, PhD, Ed
Piszynski, William Pitt, PhD, John P Pittman, PhD, Peter Pityk, Michael Piznar,
James C Plagge, PhD, Ronald Plakke, PhD, Alan Edward Platt, PhD, Larry
Plonsker, PhD, Karl W Plumlee, PhD, William A Plummer, PhD, Joseph S Plunkett,
Wendy K Pogozelski, PhD, B Poling, PhD, Jack J Polise, Charles B Pollock, Karl
Hallman Pool, PhD, George Poole, H K Poole, David D Porter, MD, Edward S Porter, Frederic E Porter, PhD, William W Porterfield, PhD, Denzil Poston, PhD, Harvey W Posvic, PhD, Louis Potash, PhD, Dale Potter, PhD, George Potter, PhD, Kenneth Potter, Rainer Potthast, PhD, Daniel B Pourreau, PhD, Joseph J Poveromo,
PhD, Susan Powell, Kendall G Powers, PhD, Ernest Ppospischil, David Pramer,
PhD, Hullahalli Prasan, PhD, Eugene Praschan, Ronald Prebys, Frank M Precopio,
PhD, Prendegast, PhD, Richard S Prentice, William Preston, Martin Preus, PhD,
Casey Jo Price, George W Price, Harold Anthony Price, PhD, R E Price, Steven
Price, PhD, J Prieditis, PhD, Char W Prince, PhD, David Prinzing, Ronald L Prior,
PhD, James E Pritchard, PhD, Barry Profeta, B Prokai, PhD, William H Prokop,
Gary Proksch, PhD, Leon Prosky, PhD, Alan L Prouty, Michael Pruchnicki, MD,
Zenon C Prusas, Michael J Pryor, PhD, William Pryor, PhD, Andrezej Przyjazny,
PhD, Ronald J Pugmire, PhD, T O Purcell, PhD, E Dale Purkhiser, PhD, Charles
Putnam, J W Putt, David Puzan, Albert Pye, PhD, Orrea F Pye, PhD, Eugene
Pyrcioch, Louis Pytlewski, PhD.
Category: Q
Forrest Quackenbush, PhD, Earl R Quandt, PhD, James Quandt, James R
Quinan, PhD, William Quisenberry.
Category: R
Daryl Raabe, Mj Rabinonitz, PhD, Joseph Rachlin, PhD, Jeff Racho, Charles
Raczowski, PhD, Frederick J Radd, PhD, Richard Radeka, David R Raden, Rodney
W Radke, PhD, Michael T Radvan, Keen Rafferty, PhD, Ronald O Rahn, PhD, Elliott Raisen, PhD, Charles Raley, PhD, C L Rambo, Harmon H Ramey, PhD, Alvin
O Ramsley, Paul Ramstad, PhD, Philip G Rand, PhD, Charles C Randall, MD, Wm
J Randall, PhD, Ann Randolph, PhD, Margene G Ranieri, PhD, Tom Rank, PhD,
Stephen C Raper, Henry Rapoport, PhD, James B Rasmussen, Lowell Rasmussen,
PhD, Lee Ratcliff, Mike Ratcliff, Egan J Rattin, Donald O Rausch, PhD, Gerald W
Rausch, PhD, Michael Rawley, Stanley R Rawn Jr, Richard L Raymond, PhD, Stuart Raynolds, PhD, Gary D Rayson, PhD, Fred Reader, D L Reasons, Theodore L
Rebstock, PhD, K Redig, Erick L Redmon, Jory Redo, PhD, Redwine, PhD, Allan H
Reed, PhD, Sherman Kennedy Reed, PhD, Thomas Reed, PhD, Norman V Rees,
Homer E Reeves, PhD, Terry A Reeves, MD, John Reffner, PhD, Thomas R Rehm,
PhD, Claude V Reich, PhD, Alfred D Reichle, PhD, George Reid, PhD, William Reid,

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PhD, Anthony A Reidlinger, PhD, Richard Reinhardt, David Reiser, PhD, Richard
Reising, PhD, Harold B Reisman, PhD, Paul Reiter, PhD, Richard H Reitz, PhD,
Joseph F Remar, PhD, George Remmenga, Susan Rempe, PhD, Harris B Renfroe,
PhD, Edward G Rennels, PhD, Hans H Rennhard, PhD, Kermit Reppond, F E
Resch, Robert Resnik, PhD, William B Retallick, PhD, Melvin Rettig, George H
Reussner, William R Rex, Walter L Reyland, Charles A Reynolds, PhD, Gary Reynolds, Joe E Reynolds, Max J Reynolds, James Rhoades, PhD, Richard G Rhoades,
PhD, James D Rhodes, Kevin Rhodes, Robert A Rhodes, PhD, Mary Rhyne, James
K Rice, Richard Rice, PhD, Dennis Rich, Bill Richards, Charles D Richards, PhD,
Joseph D Richards, Gerald Laverne Richardson, Stephen G Richardson, PhD, Verlin
H Richardson, PhD, Nancy D Richert, PhD, Frank Richey, PhD, Ed Richman, PhD,
Selma Richaman, James M Richmond, PhD, Timothy Richmond, Thomas Richter,
Robert Ricker, PhD, Nr Ricks, Ralph E Ricksecker, David Riddle, PhD, Susan Riebe,
Martin Max Rieger, PhD, Paul E Rieke, PhD, Bernard J Riley, Cody Riley, J Herbert Riley, John T Riley, PhD, Michael Riley, Jerry F Rimmer, Beverly Riordan,
Harold C Ripley, David Ririe, PhD, David Rislove, PhD, Harold W Ritchey, PhD,
William Ritchey, PhD, Gary Alan Ritchie, PhD, Harlan Ritchie, PhD, Martin Ritchie, PhD, James S Ritscher, PhD, Robert B Ritter, Steven J Titter, PhD, Paul Rivers,
PhD, John V Roach, Kenneth Roane, Ernest A Robbins, PhD, George W Robbins,
Samuel E Roberts, F H Robertson, James A Robertson, PhD, Jerry Lewis Robertson,
PhD, John S Robertson, PhD, Wilbert J Robertson, PhD, Gordon W Robertstad,
PhD, Albert Robinson, PhD, Arthur B Robinson, PhD, Geor H Robinson, M Robinson, PhD, R E Robinson, PhD, Robert Robinson, PhD, T F Robinson, PhD, Terence
L Robinson, PhD, Zachary W Robinson, Ken Robirds, John M Roblin, PhD, J La Rochelle, PhD, Peter A Rock, PhD, Robert M Roecker, PhD, Morris Rockstein, PhD,
David Rockstraw, PhD, Theodore Rockwell, PhD, James W Rodde, Billy R Rodgers,
PhD, Michael Rodgers, PhD, Harold V Rodriguez, PhD, Arthur P Roeh, Bruce A
Rogers, Gordon H Rogers, Gwenda Rogers, Randy Rogers, Robert W Rogers, PhD,
Tom Rogers, PhD, Charles R Rohde, PhD, Oliver Roholt, PhD, Dwayne Rohweder,
PhD, Robert G Rohwer, Louis D Rollmann, PhD, Louis Rombach, PhD, Thomas
Ronay, PhD, Wendell Hofma Rooks, Robt L Rooney, Simpson Roper, Robert Rorschach, Christopher La Rosa, Eugene J Rosa, PhD, John S Roscoe, PhD, Allan B
Rose, Milton J Rosen, PhD, Ward Rosen, Richard A Rosenberg, PhD, Steven L
Rosenberg, PhD, William E Rosenberg, Lawrence Rosendale, Leonard Rosenfeld,
Bruce D Rosenquist, PhD, Harold L Rosential, PhD, Joseph Rosi, Randy Rosiere,
PhD, James Ross, John P Ross, PhD, John Ross, William F Ross, Charlie Rossman,
George Rothrock, PhD, Gaylord E Rough, PhD, George E Rouse, PhD, Verald K
Row, Dighton F Rowan, PhD, James Lincoln Rowe, PhD, Melinda Rowe, Rex Rowell,
Neil W Rowland, PhD, Brian Rowles, Ibrahim Rubeiz, PhD, Mae K Rubin, PhD,
David D Rubis, PhD, Jim R Rucker, Thomas A Ruddin, MD, Charles F
Rudershausen, PhD, Thomas Rudy, PhD, Rolland Rue, PhD, Robert H Ruf, PhD,
Sue Ruff, John Ruhl, T H Ruland, Melvin D Rumbaugh, PhD, J H Rumely, PhD,
Rosmarie Von Rumker, PhD, Paul Runge, Kelli Runnels, PhD, Olaf Runquist, PhD,
Charles V Runyon, A L Ruoff, PhD, Robert Rupert, John A Rupley, PhD, George
Rushton, Louis Rusoff, PhD, David Russell, Robert R Russell, PhD, Ross F Russell,
PhD, Daberath Ryan, James M Ryan, PhD, James Ryan, James W Ryan, PhD, Julian Gilbert Ryan, Michele M Ryan, Timothy M Ryan, Wayne Ryan, PhD, Charles
J Ryant, Jr, PhD, John Rybicki, David F Ryder, Alicja M Kirkien Rzeszotarsk, PhD,
Waclaw J Rzeszotarski, PhD.
Category: S
Edward Sabo, John P Sachs, PhD, George D Sadler, PhD, J Evan Sadler, PhD,
Leon Y Sadler III, PhD, W Alter Carl Saeman, Alfred Saffer, PhD, M M Said, PhD,
George S Sajner, Alexander A Sakhnovsky, Mamdouh M Salama, PhD, Erdjan
Salih, PhD, Wilmar L Salo, PhD, Robert H Salvesen, PhD, Paul Salzman, PhD,
Dominick A Sama, PhD, Richard Sama, R E Sameth, B Samples, Edward Samsel,
PhD, Frederick E Samson, PhD, Mohammad Samiullah, PhD, Jose Sanchez, PhD,
Katherine Sanchez, John Paul Sanders, PhD, Burton B Sandiford, B Sandri, Robt
Lee Sandridge, PhD, Gary L Sanford, PhD, Robt A Sanford, PhD, John T Sanner,
John Sans, PhD, A Sam Sarem, PhD, Herbert P Sarett, PhD, Peter T Sarjeant,
PhD, Somnath Sarkar, PhD, Daryl Sas, PhD, Joachim Sasse, PhD, Rudolph Sattler,
Bryan B Sauer, PhD, Sally Saunders, Walt Saunders, David R Savello, PhD, Emilio
A Savinelli, PhD, Kathleen Kido-Savino, Samuel Sawan, PhD, Frederick G Sawyer,
PhD, Frederick Sawyer, PhD, James Scala, PhD, Frank Scalia, PhD, Barrett L
Scallet, PhD, Charles J Scanio, PhD, Paul Scardaville, Henry F Schaefe, PhD, Frederic C Schaefer, PhD, Howard J Schaeffer, PhD, Robert R Schalles, PhD, James
Schammerhorn, Carl Schauble, PhD, Gary Scheeser, Daniel Scheffel, Frank R
Scheid Jr, Francis M Scheidt, PhD, Fred M Schell, PhD, Karl A Schellenberg, PhD,

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Jay Ruffner Schenck, PhD, Timothy Wm Schenz, PhD, Robert J Scheuplein, PhD,
Alexander Schilling, PhD, F P Schilling, PhD, Keith Schimmel, PhD, Ray Schindler,
Chester Schink, PhD, Schlichting, PhD, Clifford L Schmidt, PhD, Justin O Schmidt,
PhD, Werner H Schmidt, Edward A Schmitt, Alvin Schmucker, Charles D
Schmulbach, PhD, Robert C Schnabel, Charles F Schneider, Jr, Edward P Schneider, Howard A Schneider, PhD, J Schneller III, PhD, Arthur W Schnizer, PhD, Donald Schoenberg, Helem Schols, Melvin Schonhorst, PhD, Rex Schorzman, Robert Joseph Schramel, William Schrand, Mary G Schreckenberg, PhD, Robert A Schreiber,
PhD, William Schreiber, PhD, Felix Schreiner, PhD, Alan D Schroeder, Alan Schroeder, Donald Schroeder, Hartmut Schroeder, PhD, James W Schroeder, Robert G
Schroeder, Robert S Schroeder, PhD, Robert Schubring, Richard J Schuerger, PhD,
Joseph Schufle, PhD, Charles M Schultz, Gerald Schultz, Roland Schultz, PhD, Robert Schumacher, Robert Schumacher, Garmond G Schurr, Mark Schusler, George W
Schustek, Donald Frank Schutz, PhD, Peter T Schuyler, Karl A Schwape, Robert
Schwartz, PhD, Henry G Schwartzberg, PhD, Jeffrey A Schwarz, Jeffry Schwarz,
Florian Schwarzkopf, PhD, Florian Schwarzkopf, PhD, Otto R Schweitzer, PhD, Albert E Schweizer, PhD, Thomas R Schwerdt, George W Schwert, PhD, Howard
Schwiebert, John J Sciarra, PhD, David F Scott, PhD, Deborah J Scott, PhD, J O
Scott, James A Scott, John W Scott, PhD, Michael Screpetis, MD, Michael E
Scribner, PhD, D G Scruggs, Walter T Scudder, PhD, Spencer L Seager, PhD, WH
Seaman, George Sears, J Glenn Seay, Jack B Secor, PhD, Joseph Sedberry, PhD,
Richard A See, David W Seegmiller, PhD, Ralph W Seelke, PhD, Charles F Seger
III, Paul A Seib, PhD, Lewis S Seiden, PhD, Frank R Seidl, William Edgar Seifert,
PhD, Harvey N Seiger, PhD, John H Seipel, PhD, Ronald Sekellick, Paul B Selby,
PhD, Seleem, PhD, Maurie Semel, PhD, Robert Seng, Taze L Senn, PhD, James C
Sentz, PhD, Alan J Senzel, PhD, Lisa Servais, William G Setser, Earl Wm Seugling,
PhD, John Severns, Raymond F Sewell, PhD, Richard W Sewell, Frederick H
Sexsmith, PhD, Frank David Seydel, PhD, Fritiof S Fjostrand, MD, PhD, James
Shaeffer, PhD, James Shaffner, Donald G Shaheen, Terry Shannon, Kenneth N
Sharitz, Sharkey, PhD, Dexter B Sharp, PhD, Kenneth Sharp, Sharp, Grant William Sharpe, PhD, M L Sharrah, PhD, Elwood R Shaw, Gordon Shaw, Richard
Shaw, PhD, Sandy Shaw, Warren D Shaw, James J Shea, William Sheasley, PhD,
Jennifer P Sheets, Ralph W Sheets, PhD, Paul Sheil, Bob Sheldon, Joseph Sheldon,
Harvey D Shell, PhD, George C Shelton, PhD, David P Shepherd, PhD, Raymond
L Shepherd, PhD, Peter Sheridan, Anthony Sherman, PhD, Joseph Sherrill, PhD,
Frederick A Sherrin, Dennis Shevlin, PhD, Kevin J Shields, Robert M Shields Jr,
PhD, Frederick F Shih, PhD, Avner Shilman, PhD, Vernon J Shiner, PhD, Lee
Shiozawa, Charles Wm Shipman, PhD, Gene M Shirley, PhD, Frank Connard Shirley, PhD, Gilbert R Shockley, PhD, Steven E Shoelson, MD, PhD, Robert S Shoemaker, Merle D Shogren, Robert L Shone, PhD, John J Shore III, James Edward
Shottafer, PhD, Adolph C Shotts, Loy William Shreve, PhD, Craig E Shuler, Patrick
J Shuler, PhD, John B Shumaker, PhD, Cornwell Shuman, PhD, Eunice C
Shuytema, PhD, Barbara Shykoff, PhD, Ronald E Siatkowski, PhD, Kent
Sickmeyer, Dave Seibel, Merlin R Siefken, Steve Seifried, PhD, Arthur Siegel, John
P Siegel, MD, Wm C Siegel, William Siegfried, James Ernest Siggins, PhD, Charles
Signorino, PhD, John W Sij, PhD, Michael P Siklosi, PhD, Leonard S Silbert, PhD,
Claude W Sill, Lucila Silva, Herbert Silverman, PhD, J Silverman, PhD, Walter
Lawrence Silvernail, PhD, L Simerl, PhD, John Simion, Karl L Simkins, PhD, Joseph H Simmons, Carl Simms, Dorothy M Simon, PhD, Edward Simon, PhD, RJ
Simon, Walter Simons, A Craig Simpson, John Simpson, Lynn Simpson, Michael B
Simpson, Donald E Sims, Suman Priyadarshi Harain Sin, PhD, G Gail Singh,
Vernon L Singleton, PhD, Kenneth Sinks, Lou Di Sioudi, Richard H Sioui, PhD,
David M Sipe, PhD, Herbert H Sipe, PhD, Charles C Sisler, Mareu A Sitarsici, PhD,
Sitarski, PhD, Richard L Sitton, Ron Sizemure, William Skagerberg, Mertonm
Skaggs, Hugh B Skees, John R Skelley, Jerome P Skelly, PhD, Edward L Skidmore,
PhD, Leslie D Skinner, Earl Skogley, PhD, Lawrence Skromme, Bolesh J Skutnik,
PhD, Philip E Slade, PhD, Robert E Slater, W Roy Slaunwhite, PhD, Nelson Sigman
Slavik, PhD, Jane A Slezak, PhD, Nathan H Sloane, PhD, A Slomowitz, DDS, Earl
R Sluder, PhD, Thomas E Slusher, Gilbert Small, PhD, Glen Wm Smalley, PhD,
James B Smart, PhD, William Donald Smart, Ronald Smedberg, PhD, Darryl E
Smika, PhD, Robert Smiley, PhD, Alan Smith, PhD, Augustin Smith, Augustine N
Smith, Bruce G Smith, MD, C Lavett Smith, PhD, Dale Smith, PhD, Dana L Smith,
Danny Smith, David A Smith, PhD, Deboyd L Smith, Delmont K Smith, PhD, Elwin
E Smith, Eric S Smith, Francis Marion Smith, Garmond S Smith, PhD, Garry A
Smith, PhD, George Smith, Gilbert H Smith, PhD, Herbert L Smith, PhD, Ivan K
Smith, James L Smith, PhD, James R Smith, Jay H Smith, PhD, John E Smith,
PhD, Louis C Smith, PhD, Marian J Smith, PhD, Mark A Smith, PhD, Marvin F
Smith Jr, Maurice Smith, Maynard E Smith, PhD, Nathan L Smith, PhD, Paul V

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Smith, PhD, Percy Lieghton Smith, Robert L Smith, PhD, Roger C Smith, Sam C
Smith, PhD, Shofner Smith, T J Lee Smith, Thomas E Smith, PhD, Thomas Smith,
PhD, Tim Smith, Wesley D Smith, PhD, Clara Smith Craver, Eileen Smithers,
Smithrud, PhD, G Ray Smithson, Jr, Joseph Smock, Tom Smoot, PhD, Bronislaw
B Smura, PhD, Snavely, Helen Snedberg, Richard L Snow, PhD, Thomas M Snow,
David Snyder, PhD, Dudley C Snyder, PhD, George Snyder, PhD, Jack A Snyder,
PhD, Joe Snyder, William H Snyer, Dave A Soerens, PhD, Lon Solomita, Xiaouhi
M Song, PhD, P Sonnet, PhD, Quentin F Soper, PhD, Thomas M Sopko, David P
Sorensen, PhD, Armand M Souby, Chris Soule, Everett Southam, PhD, Parks
Souther, William Southern, PhD, Larry Southwick, Edmund Sowa, John R Sowa,
PhD, Edward E Sowers, PhD, Darrel H Spackman, PhD, Sparks, PhD, Tom Sparks,
Dean Spatz, Gerald E Speck, Robert L Speckman, Abraham Spector, PhD, Michael
P Spector, PhD, Richard C Spectors, Jack M Speece, Steven Tremble Spees, PhD,
John L Speier, PhD, Philip Speir, Aaron B Speirs, Kemet Spence, PhD, James P
Serber, Richard J Sperley, PhD, Leroy Spilde, PhD, Leo H Spinar, PhD, Bill Spindler, Robert F Spink, Jan J Spitzer, PhD, Paul Spivey, Gary A Splitter, PhD, Marie
T Spoerlein, PhD, Ralph J Spohn, PhD, Robert B Spokane, PhD, Lucian M Sprague,
PhD, Robert C Springborn, PhD, Allan Springer, PhD, David T Springer, PhD, Timothy A Springer, PhD, J C Sprtsbergen, PhD, G J Sprokel, PhD, Michael Spurlock,
PhD, Alexander Squire, James P Srebro, Charles St Jean, DVM, Thomas M Stabler,
William Jacob Stadelman, PhD, Edward Stadelmann, PhD, Leon Stadtherr, PhD,
Alice Stafford, Mark Stahmann, PhD, Joseph Staley, Gilbert Stallknecht, PhD,
Charles H Stammer, PhD, Daniel Stamps, Norman W Standish, PhD, Edward A
Stanley, PhD, E J Stanton, Gary M Stanwood, Mark A Staples, PhD, Stephen E
Stapp, Don S Starcher, James C Stark, PhD, Kelly L Stark, Donn Starkey, Robt I
Starr, PhD, Arnold E Steele, Kathleen P Steele, PhD, Sanford L Steelman, PhD,
Stephen N Stehlik, Howard Steinberg, PhD, Wm Stekiel, PhD, Peter Stelos, PhD,
Paul Stelzner, David G Stephan, PhD, Larry C Stephans, Frank Stephens, PhD,
Stuart Stephens, PhD, Robt L Stern, PhD, Rune L Stjernholm, PhD, Alvin Rae
Stetson, Frank Stevens, James I Stevens, M F Stevens, PhD, Robert Stevens, Frank
J Stevenson, PhD, Robert L Stevenson, PhD, William C Stevenson, Charles Steward, PhD, Kerry K Steward, PhD, Darryl Stewart, Ivan Stewart, PhD, Mark Stewart, Robt B Stewart, Werner K Stiefel, Chris Stier, Fred B Stifel, PhD, Gerald Still,
PhD, E N Stillings, Donald L Stinson, PhD, Richard Stinson, PhD, C Chester Stock,
PhD, Geo J Stockburger, PhD, Bill Stoeppel, James O Stoffer, PhD, Robert L
Stoffer, PhD, G Stohrer, PhD, Leonard Stoloff, Howard Stone, PhD, Robert M Stone,
PhD, Wm H Stone, Robson Storey, PhD, John S Storges, PhD, Clara A Storvick,
PhD, Dennis E Stover, PhD, Richard Strachan, PhD, P Stransky, Robert R Strauss,
PhD, Roger W Strauss, PhD, E Whitman Strecker, Edward Strickling, PhD, Sarah
T Strinden, PhD, Bruce C Strnad, PhD, Walter Strohecker, Charles Strohkirch,
PhD, Allen Strother, PhD, Wilfred Stroud, Kirk Struce, Arthur Struempler, PhD,
Jeffrey Sturm, Duane H Strunk, M Howard Strunk, Dick Strusz, Henry Stry, Ralph
E Styring, Warren Stubblebine, PhD, T Elton Stubblefield, PhD, John Stubbles,
PhD, Ben G Studebaker, Alan M Stueber, PhD, David O Stuebner, Doug Stueve,
Mark Stuever, Dale Stukenholtz, PhD, Eugene C Stump, PhD, Felipe Suarez, Bala
Subramaniam, PhD, John Sulkowski, Daniel T Sullivan, DDS, David Sultana,
Wayne Summons, Sherman Archie Sundet, PhD, Bob Sutaria, Charles Suter, G
Russell Sutherland, Frederick H Suydam, PhD, James A Svetgoff, Karl Svoboda,
Skip Swanner, Thomas Swanson, William A Sweeney, PhD, Ronald L Sweet, PhD,
Richard Swenson, R P Swift, PhD, Robinson M Swift, PhD, Elizabeth D Swiger,
PhD, Ronald J Swinko, Chauncey M Swinney, PhD, Robert D Sydansk, Donald E
Sykes, PhD, Leif Syrstad, S S Szabo, PhD, Danuta Szalecka, Wojciech Szalecki,
PhD, Steven Szambaris.
Category: T
Lars Taavola, Charles E Tackels, Delley Tafel, PhD, David Taft, PhD, B A Tait,
PhD, Larry Talley, PhD, Katherine Talluto, PhD, John Talpas, Kim H Tan, PhD,
John Tanaka, PhD, Rita Tao, Waino A Tapale, Armen Charles Tarjan, PhD, Milton
A Taves, PhD, Douglas H Taylor, PhD, Gene Warren Taylor, PhD, Harold M Taylor,
PhD, John E Taylor, PhD, Paul J Taylor, PhD, Richard Taylor, PhD, Robt Techo,
PhD, Stephen Tedore, Robert W Temple, David M Tennent, PhD, Martha Tennent,
Harold Tenney, Wilton R Tenney, PhD, Aubrey Tennille, PhD, Lowell G Tensmeyer,
PhD, Thomas Tepas, Kenneth J Terbeek, PhD, Glenn A Terry, PhD, W G Teubner,
Richard Tew, PhD, Ram Tewari, PhD, Raymond Thacker, PhD, Warren A Thaler,
PhD, Walter E Thatcher, PhD, John Thebo, Brenda Theis, Don Theis, Wayne
Therrell, Richard C Theuer, PhD, Lawrence Thieben, Gregory Thiel, Thomas Thiel,
Lawrence Euegene Thielen, Vernon J Thielmann, PhD, John D Thirkill, Kris V
Thiruvathukal, PhD, Edward F Thode, PhD, Richard W Thoma, PhD, Charles

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Thomas, Jr, PhD, Dean Thomas, Dudley G Thomas, Forrest D Thomas, PhD, Gerald
Thomas, PhD, James Thomas, PhD, Jerry Thomas, Christina Thompson, Ellen
Thompson, Gerald E Thompson, Grant Thompson, PhD, Herbert B Thompson, PhD,
Jack Thompson, Louis M Thompson, PhD, Louis Thompson, PhD, Mary Thompson,
PhD, Neal P Thompson, PhD, Ralph N Thompson, Richard D Thompson, Richard
Thompson, PhD, Robert R Thompson, PhD, Ted Thompson, Eyvind Thor, PhD, G
J Thorbecke, PhD, Henry Thorland, Charles Thorman, PhD, Francis Thorne, PhD,
David Thornton, Robert Thornton, PhD, Ruth D Thornton, PhD, Thomas Thorpe,
Peter E Throckmorton, PhD, Lewis J Throop, PhD, John G Thweatt, PhD, Melinda
Tichenor, Albert W Tiedemann, PhD, Thomas Tighe, Frank M Tiller, PhD, Henry
C Tillson, PhD, Torke E Timell, PhD, William Timm, Richard Timmons, PhD, Samuel W Tinsley, PhD, James Tobey, Robert A Tobey, PhD, Stephen W Tobey, PhD,
Douglas M Tollefsen, PhD, Manolis M Tomadakis, PhD, Arthur J Toompas, Vladimir P Torchilin, PhD, Calvin D Tormanen, PhD, Joseph Torosian, Mary E Totaro,
Ildiko Toth, PhD, Paul E Toth, Robert Totusek, PhD, Mike Touchinski, Donald R
Tourville, PhD, Laura L Tovo, PhD, D A Towner, Peter Toynbee, Ralph Trambarulo,
PhD, John H Trapp, Tim Trapp, Del Traveller, Jeffrey C Trewella, PhD, Wm W
Trigg, PhD, Robert B Trimble, PhD, Glover B Triplett, PhD, Charles F Trivisoono,
Joseph M Tropp, Alvah F Troyer, PhD, G I Troyer, Richard A Trudel, Judith L
Truden, PhD, Patricio Eduardo Trujillo, John Trulio, PhD, Larry Trzupek, PhD,
Richard Trzupek, Jane Tsai, A Tschaeche, Walter R Tschi, PhD, Manuel Tsiang,
PhD, Billy Bob Tucker, PhD, Mary Ann Tucker, Richard Tucker, W Daivd Tucker,
Paul Tueller, PhD, Laland W Tufts, Robert J Tuite, PhD, Bryan Tullis, Donald
Tuomi, PhD, Peter Turbett, Natasha Turkai, Anthony Turkevich, PhD, Brian Turner, Ella V Turner, PhD, E Brent Turnipseed, PhD, Henry A Tuttle, Ian C Twilley,
PhD, James Twohy, Knorad T Wu, PhD, Ed Tyczkowski, PhD, Tony Tye, Edmund
E Tylutki, PhD.
Category: U
George Uhlig, PhD, Joseph J Ulliman, PhD, Alexander Ulmer, E H Ulrich, Kathleen Umstead, Paul W Unger, PhD, Simon Upfill-Brown, Wm A Uricchio, PhD, Dave
Uscheek, O Manuel Uy, PhD.
Category: V
Richard Vacherot, James Vacik, PhD, Kyriake U Valassi, PhD, Laura Valdes,
Siva Vallabhaneni, Vida Vambutas, PhD, Horn H H Van, PhD, Rheenen B Van,
PhD, Strien R E Van, PhD, Willard Van Asdall, PhD, Theodore Van Bruggen, PhD,
Clayton Van Hall, PhD, Wayne Van Meter, PhD, Richard J Van Pelt, Steve Vanata,
John L Vandeberg, PhD, Thomas H Vanderspurt, PhD, Jerry G Vandertuig, PhD,
John Warren Vanderveen, Donald Vandervelde, Christina Vandervende, PhD, Sam
Vandivort, Edward Vandrunen, Tina K Vandyk, Richard M Vaneffen, PhD, Naoloa
Vanorden, PhD, Jerry Vanseckle, Richrad S Varga, William York Varney, PhD,
James E Varnon, PhD, Bangalore S Vasu, PhD, Robert Dahlmeier Vatine, PhD, Eva
Vavrousek-Jakuba, PhD, Thomas M Veazey, PhD, Rodney D Veitschegger Jr, MD,
Steve Venner, Carl J Verbanic, PhD, Anthony J Verbiscar, PhD, John R Vercellotti,
PhD, Laval Verhalen, PhD, Lonnie W Vernon, PhD, Jim Vess, Kent Vickie, Edward
J Vidt, Richard A Vierling, PhD, Herbert M Vines, PhD, Alfred Viola, PhD, Luciano
Virgili, PhD, Robert L Vitek Sr, C J Voelkel, Dennis E Voelker, C L Voellinger, Bill
Vogel, Richard W Vogel, Roger F Vogel, Paul Vogt, Staci Voll, Gert P J Volpp, PhD,
Jim Volz, Paul A Volz, PhD, James Vomocil, PhD, Hans Von Amsberg, PhD, Howard Voorhees, PhD, Norman Vorcheimer, PhD, Frederick H Vorhis, Carroll Voss,
Deone Voss, Donald L Voss, Edward W Voss, PhD, Duc Vu.
Category: W
Lois Wachtman, Robert Wade, PhD, Thomas J Wade, PhD, Allan G Waelchli, Salome G Waelsch, PhD, A R Wagner, Anne M Wagner, Frederick Wm Wagner, PhD,
Chien Moo Wai, PhD, John Wakeman, PhD, Wm D Wakley, PhD, F A Walas, Mike
Wadlington, Harry M Walker, PhD, Jerry C Walker, PhD, Jimmy N Walker, Russell
W Walker, PhD, William C Walker, PhD, William T Walker, Haven N Wall Jr, MD,
Brent Wallace, David R Wallace, Edwin G Wallace, PhD, John Wallace, Lynn Wallace, Michael Wallace, James Waller, PhD, Wm Walls, Kevin K Walsh, Robert Jerome Walsh, William T Walter, Arthur E Waltking, Theo R Walton, PhD, Wilber
Walton, Frederick F Wangaard, PhD, Mansukhlal C Wani, PhD, R Wanke, PhD, Edward H Ward, PhD, Robert S Ward, W C Warlick, Brian Warner, James A
Warnhoff, Lawrence Warzel, PhD, Robert Washburn, Stephen S Washburne, PhD,
Maurice Wassmann, G S Wassum, Calude G Wasterlain, PhD, David Waters, PhD,
James D Waters, Charles Watkins, PhD, Michael J Watkins, W D Watkins, B
Watne, PhD, Thomas L Watschke, PhD, Jeff Watson, Dean D Watt, PhD, Kenneth
E F Watt, PhD, Kyle L Watt, Mark Weatherston, Harry Weaver, Jay Weaver, Wil-

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liam M Weaver, PhD, A Dinsmoor Webb, PhD, Jack W Webb, James Webb, Michael
Webb, William Paul Webb, PhD, Arthur P Weber, PhD, David F Weber, PhD, David
J Weber, Mary Weber, William Weber, PhD, John R Wesbster, Orrin J Webster,
PhD, Owen Webster, PhD, Wm J Wechter, PhD, David S Weddell, PhD, George G
Weddell, Robert G Weeks, Howard H Weetall, PhD, Gene Wegner, PhD, Charles W
Wehking, Timothy S Wehmes, Donald C Wehner, A R Weide, MD, T Craig
Weidensaul, PhD, Patrick L Weidner, Edward D Weil, PhD, Roy Weiland, Eugene
C Weinbach, PhD, Leonard H Weinstein, PhD, Donald J Weintritt, Eugene Weipert,
PhD, Wm W Weiss, George A Weisgerber, PhD, Leonard Weisler, PhD, FD Weiss,
MD, Harvey J Weiss, MD, PhD, Eugene P Weisser, Barry R Weissman, Frank J
Welch, PhD, Donald C Wells, Larry Wells, PhD, Shane Wells, Jerome R Welnetz,
Lisa M Welter, PhD, Irving Wender, PhD, Michael G Wendling, Roger Michael
Weppelman, PhD, Leslie M Werbel, PhD, Robert J Werth, PhD, Wescott, PhD, Richard West, Warwick R West, Richard S Westberry, DDS, Gerald T Westbrook, Carl
A Westby, PhD, Tammy Westerman, D T Westermann, PhD, Wm M Westhoff, John
A Westland, PhD, Thomas Westmoreland, PhD, Henry G Weston, PhD, Raymond
Westra, PhD, Edgar F Westrum, PhD, James Wm Westwat, PhD, Robert L
Wetegrove, PhD, Robert L Wetegrove, PhD, John E Wey Jr, Joseph Whalen, PhD,
Keni Whalen, Richard Whalen, PhD, James Wharton, PhD, Frank C Wheeler, PhD,
Thomas J Wheeler, John M Whelan, PhD, D K Whigham, PhD, Roy L Whistler,
PhD, Hall Whitacre, Alan W White, PhD, James D White, PhD, Joe Lloyd White,
PhD, Randall White, Richard White, William White, Kenneth E Whitehead, Richard
Whiteley, PhD, Joe U Whiteman, PhD, Charles Whiteside, PhD, Jack Whiteside,
James R Whitley, PhD, Wendell K Whitney, PhD, Roy E Whitt, Leslie Whitton,
PhD, Donald E Whyte, PhD, Harry Wiant, PhD, Donna Wichers, William Wickham,
PhD, Steven Widen, PhD, Vernon R Widerquist, Joseph R Wiebush, PhD, Grace M
Wieder, PhD, Robt R Wiederkehr, PhD, Matthew Wielgosz, Doug Wiens, Tadeusz
Karol Wiewiorowski, PhD, Alan R Wiggins, Larry Wiginton, Charles Wilber, PhD,
Gary Wilcox, PhD, Gene Wild, PhD, Kenneth A Wilde, PhD, Tom V Wilder, Richard
Wildermuth, W V Wilding, PhD, Bill B Wiley, PhD, Jim Wiley, Robert A Wiley,
PhD, Stella H Wilkes, Donald W Wilkie, Robert A Wilkins, PhD, Peirre A
Willermet, PhD, C H Williams, PhD, D J Williams, Denise Williams, Donald H Williams, PhD, Douglas Williams, J F Williams, PhD, Jack M Williams, PhD, James
M Williams, Karla E Williams, Richard Williams, PhD, Tom V Williams, PhD, Gene
Wills, PhD, Alan P Wilson, Armin Wilson, PhD, Byron J Wilson, PhD, James Wilson, Jeffrey P Wilson, PhD, Leslie Wilson, PhD, Lowell Wilson, PhD, Robert Wilson,
PhD, Wilbur William Wilson, PhD, James D Winefordner, PhD, David Wing, PhD,
John R Wingard, Gary M De Winkle, Bruce Winn, Robert S Winniford, PhD, Weldon
E Winsauer, Anthony E Winston, Lesley Winston, William Winter, PhD, Harry
Winterlin, Wray L Winterlin, Richard B Winters, MD, Craig Wise, Richard M Wise,
PhD, Robert H Wise, Jr, Lawrence A Wishner, PhD, Eugene H Wissler, PhD, Paul
C Witbeck, Peter C Witherell, PhD, Mark Witowski, Gilbert Witschard, PhD, Jerry
Witt, PhD, George K Wittenberg, PhD, Lloyd D Witter, PhD, Frank A Witzmann,
PhD, Gerald Woehick, Charles E Woelke, PhD, William E Woenker, Robert C Wohl,
PhD, David A Wohleber, PhD, Peter J Wojtowicz, PhD, Jim Wolf, George Wolfe,
John B Wolff, PhD, Jerry Wolfkill, Tammy L Wolfram, Peter Wolle, Woller, K Wong,
PhD, Ka-Chun Wong, Laurence Wong, PhD, Otto Wong, PhD, Earl C Wood, MD,
Henry Wood, PhD, John L Wood, PhD, Malcolm Wood, Mike Wood, Roberta L Wood,
Scott Emerson Wood, PhD, Thomas Wood, PhD, William A Wood, PhD, William A
Wood, PhD, Joseph Eliot Woodbridge, PhD, Robert T Woodburn, Frank Woodfield,
Jim Woodford, David J Woods, Jack Woods, David Woodward, PhD, Richard Woodward, Marvin S Wool, David Dilley Wooldridge, PhD, Tyler A Woolley, PhD, Gerald
B Woolsey, PhD, Barbara E Workentine, PhD, David Eugene Worley, PhD, Richard
F Worley, DDS, Walt Worsham, PhD, Johathan Worstell, PhD, James G Worth, Von
Worthington, Donald P Wrathall, PhD, Charles H Wright, PhD, Glenn Wright, PhD,
Jerry Wright, Nathan Wright, Paul M Wright, PhD, Robert Wright, MD, Robt W
Wright, PhD, William Wright, Yao Hua Wu, PhD, Stephen Walker Wunderly, PhD,
David Wurm, PhD, Reece E Wyant, Philip R Wyde, PhD, Kathi Wyldeck, PhD, John
Wylie, Margret J Wyllie, E Staten Wynne, PhD, Elmer S Wynne, PhD, Leslie K
Wynston, PhD, R A Wynveen, PhD, Richard F Wyse, Stephen L Wythe, PhD.
Category: Y
Gilbert Yan, Will Yanke, William H Yanko, PhD, John Lee Yarnall, PhD, Sidney
Yaverbaum, PhD, David A Yeadon, Randy Yeager, Elisabeth Stelle Yearick, PhD,
Carlton S Yee, PhD, Ying C Yee, PhD, Charles Yeh, Wilbur Yellin, PhD, Yin Chao
Yen, PhD, Stuart Yntema Sr, John H Yopp, PhD, Masami Yoshimura, PhD, Marvin
Yost, PhD, Richard A Yost, PhD, David C Young, PhD, G Young, Ralph S Young,
Raymond H Young, PhD, Robert D Young, William D Young Jr, Ralph Yount, PhD,

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Morgan Chuan Yuan Sze, PhD, Stephen A Yuhas, Mary Alic Yund, PhD, Libby
Yunger, PhD.
Category: Z
Jeffrey Zachman, Stanley E Zager, PhD, Edwarfd P Zahora, Ihor Zajac, PhD,
Ethel S Zalay, PhD, Andreas A Zavi, PhD, John Zebrowski, Wm N Zeiger, PhD,
Allen Zelman, PhD, Jiri Zemlicka, Kerry Zemp, Donald F Zetik, PhD, Dong Er
Zhang, PhD, Timothy D Ziebarth, PhD, Edward N Ziegler, PhD, John Benjamin Ziegler, PhD, Wm A Ziegler, W E Zieman, Charles W Ziemer, PhD, Ferdinand Zienty,
PhD, Robert G Zimbelman, PhD, Arthur J Zimmer, PhD, Curt Zimmerman, John
G Zimmerman, PhD, Tommy Zimmerman, PhD, Gary Zimmermann, Donald Zink,
PhD, Ronald F Ziolo, PhD, Steven L Zirkelbach, MD, Thomas A Zitter, PhD, Darryl
E Zoch, Marvin H Zoerb, Harry D Zook, PhD, Charles Zubritsky, David Zuckerberg,
Carl Zuehlke, PhD, Perr Zuman, PhD, Edward J Zuperku, PhD, Soloman Zwerdling,
PhD, Steven C Zylkowski.
STATEMENT

BY

ATMOSPHERIC SCIENTISTS

ON

GREENHOUSE WARMING

(http://www.sepp.org/statment.html, February 24, 2006)


WASHINGTON, D.C., FEBRUARY 27, 1992As independent scientists, researching
atmospheric and climate problems, we are concerned by the agenda for UNCED, the
United Nations Conference on Environment and Development, being developed by
environmental activist groups and certain political leaders. This so-called Earth
Summit is scheduled to convene in Brazil in June 1992 and aims to impose a system
of global environmental regulations, including onerous taxes on energy fuels, on the
population of the United States and other industrialized nations.
Such policy initiatives derive from highly uncertain scientific theories. They are
based on the unsupported assumption that catastrophic global warming follows from
the burning of fossil fuels and requires immediate action. We do not agree.
A survey of U.S. atmospheric scientists, conducted in the summer of 1991, confirms that there is no consensus about the cause of the slight warming observed
during the past century. A recently published research paper even suggests that
sunspot variability, rather than a rise in greenhouse gases, is responsible for the
global temperature increases and decreases recorded since about 1880.
Furthermore, the majority of scientific participants in the survey agreed that the
theoretical climate models used to predict a future warming cannot be relied upon
and are not validated by the existing climate record. Yet all predictions are based
on such theoretical models.
Finally, agriculturalists generally agree that any increase in carbon dioxide levels
from fossil fuel burning has beneficial effects on most crops and on world food supply.
We are disturbed that activists, anxious to stop energy and economic growth, are
pushing ahead with drastic policies without taking notice of recent changes in the
underlying science. We fear that the rush to impose global regulations will have catastrophic impacts on the world economy, on jobs, standards of living, and health
care, with the most severe consequences falling upon developing countries and the
poor.
David G. Aubrey, Ph.D., Senior Scientist, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute.
Nathaniel B. Guttman, Ph.D., Research Physical Scientist, National Climatic Data
Center.
Hugh W. Ellsaesser, Ph.D., Meteorologist, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory.
Richard Lindzen, Ph.D., Center for Meteorology and Physical Meteorology, M.l.T.
Robert C. Balling, Ph.D., Director, Laboratory of Climatology, Arizona State University.
Patrick Michaels, Ph.D., Assoc. Professor of Environmental Sciences, University of
Virginia.
Roger Pielke, Ph.D., Professor of Atmospheric Science, Colorado State University.
Michael Garstang, Ph.D., Professor of Meteorology, University of Virginia.
Sherwood B. Idso, Ph.D., Research Physicist, U.S. Water Conservation Laboratory.
Lev S. Gandin, Ph.D., UCAR Scientist, National Meteorological Center.
John A. McGinley, Chief, Forecast Research Group, Forecast Systems Laboratory,
NOAA.
H. Jean Thiebaux, Ph.D., Research Scientist, National Meteorological Center, National Weather Service, NOM.
Kenneth V. Beard, Ph.D., Professor of Atmospheric Physics, University of Illinois.
Paul W. Mielke, Jr., Ph.D., Professor, Dept. of Statistics, Colorado State University.
Thomas Lockhart, Meteorologist, Meteorological Standards Institute.

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Peter F. Giddings, Meteorologist, Weather Service Director.
Hazen A. Bedke, Meteorologist, Former Regional Director, National Weather Service.
Gabriel T. Csanady, Ph.D., Eminent Professor, Old Dominion University.
Roy Leep, Executive Weather Director, Gillett Weather Data Services.
Terrance J. Clark, Meteorologist, U.S. Air Force.
Neil L Frank, Ph.D., Meteorologist.
Michael S. Uhart, Ph.D., Meteorologist, National Weather Service.
Bruce A. Boe, Ph.D., Director, North Dakota Atmospheric Resource Board.
Andrew Detwiler, Ph.D., Assoc. Prof., Institute of Atmospheric Sciences, S. Dakota
School of Mines & Technology.
Robert M. Cunningham, Consulting Meteorologist, Fellow, American Meteorological
Society.
Steven R. Hanna, Ph.D., Sigma Research Corporation.
Elliot Abrams, Meteorologist, Senior Vice President, AccuWeather, Inc.
William E. Reifenyder, Ph.D., Consulting Meteorologist, Professor Emeritus, Forest
Meteorology, Yale University.
David W. Reynolds, Research Meteorologist.
Jerry A. Williams, Meteorologist, President, Oceanroutes, Inc.
Lee W. Eddington, Meteorologist, Geophysics Division, Pacific Missile Test Center.
Werner A. Baum, Ph.D., former Dean, College of Arts & Sciences, Florida State University.
David P. Rogers, Ph.D., Assoc. Professor of Research Oceanography, Scripps Institution of Oceanography.
Brian Fiedler, Ph.D., Asst. Professor of Meteorology, School of Meteorology, University of Oklahoma.
Edward A. Brandes, Meteorologist.
Melvyn Shapiro, Chief of Meteorological Research, Wave Propagation Laboratory,
NOM.
Joseph Zabransky, Jr., Associate Professor of Meteorology, Plymouth State College.
James A. Moore, Project Manager, Research Applications Program, National Center
for Atmospheric Research.
Daniel J. McNaughton, ENSR Consulting and Engineering.
Brian Sussman, Meteorologist.
Robert D. Elliott, Meteorologist, Fellow, American Meteorological Society.
H. Read McGrath, Ph.D., Meteorologist.
Earl G. Droessler, Ph.D., North Carolina State University.
Robert E. Zabrecky, Meteorologist.
William M. Porch, Ph.D., Atmospheric Physicist, Los Alamos National Laboratory.
Earle R. Williams, Ph.D, Assoc. Prof. of Meteorology, Massachusetts Institute of
Technology.
S. Fred Singer, Ph.D., Atmospheric Physicist, Univ. of Virginia, President, Science
& Environmental Policy Project.
Please note: Affiliations listed are for identification purposes only.
THE LEIPZIG DECLARATION ON GLOBAL CLIMATE CHANGE
(http://www.sepp.org/leipzig.html, February 24, 2006)
As independent scientists concerned with atmospheric and climate problems, we
along with many of our fellow citizensare apprehensive about emission targets
and timetables adopted at the Climate Conference held in Kyoto, Japan, in December 1997. This gathering of politicians from some 160 signatory nations aims to impose on citizens of the industrialized nationsbut not on othersa system of global
environmental regulations that include quotas and punitive taxes on energy fuels
to force substantial cuts in energy use within 10 years, with further cuts to follow.
Stabilizing atmospheric carbon dioxidethe announced goal of the Climate Treaty
would require that fuel use be cut by as much as 60 to 80 percentworldwide!
Energy is essential for economic growth. In a world in which poverty is the greatest social pollutant, any restriction on energy use that inhibits economic growth
should be viewed with caution. We understand the motivation to eliminate what are
perceived to be the driving forces behind a potential climate change; but we believe
the Kyoto Protocolto curtail carbon dioxide emissions from only part of the world
communityis dangerously simplistic, quite ineffective, and economically destructive to jobs and standards-of-living.
More to the point, we consider the scientific basis of the 1992 Global Climate
Treaty to be flawed and its goal to be unrealistic. The policies to implement the
Treaty are, as of now, based solely on unproven scientific theories, imperfect com-

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puter modelsand the unsupported assumption that catastrophic global warming
follows from an increase in greenhouse gases, requiring immediate action. We do not
agree. We believe that the dire predictions of a future warming have not been validated by the historic climate record, which appears to be dominated by natural fluctuations, showing both warming and cooling. These predictions are based on nothing
more than theoretical models and cannot be relied on to construct far-reaching policies.
As the debate unfolds, it has become increasingly clear thatcontrary to the conventional wisdomthere does not exist today a general scientific consensus about
the importance of greenhouse warming from rising levels of carbon dioxide. In fact,
most climate specialists now agree that actual observations from both weather satellites and balloon-borne radiosondes show no current warming whatsoeverin direct contradiction to computer model results.
Historically, climate has always been a factor in human affairswith warmer periods, such as the medieval climate optimum, playing an important role in economic expansion and in the welfare of nations that depend primarily on agriculture.
Colder periods have caused crop failures, and led to famines, disease, and other documented human misery. We must, therefore, remain sensitive to any and all human
activities that could affect future climate.
However, based on all the evidence available to us, we cannot subscribe to the
politically inspired world view that envisages climate catastrophes and calls for
hasty actions. For this reason, we consider the drastic emission control policies deriving from the Kyoto conferencelacking credible support from the underlying
scienceto be ill-advised and premature.
This statement is based on the International Symposium on the Greenhouse Controversy, held in Leipzig, Germany on Nov. 910, 1995, and in Bonn, Germany on
Nov. 1011, 1997. For further information, contact the Europaeische Akademie fuer
Umweltfragen or The Science and Environmental Policy Project in Arlington, Virginia.<singer@sepp.org>
SIGNATORIES TO THE LEIPZIG DECLARATION
(http://www.sepp.org/LDsigs.html, February 24, 2006)
The following is a partial list only. Following the Kyoto Conference on global
warming, the original Declaration was slightly amended. The posting of 33 additional signatories is pending verification that the scientists still agree with the statement. The list will be updated as these verifications come in.
Dr. John Apel, oceanographer, Global Oceans Associates, formerly with Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory.
Dr. David Aubrey, Senior Scientist, Marine Policy Center, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute, Massachusetts.
Dr. Duwayne M. Anderson,Professor, Texas A&M University.
Dr. Robert Balling, Professor and Director of the Office of Climatology, Arizona
State University; more than 80 research articles published in scientific journals;
author of The Heated Debate: Greenhouse Predictions vs. Climate Reality (1992);
co-author, Interactions of Desertifications and Climate, a report for the UN Environmental Program and the World Meteorological Organization; contributor/
reviewer, IPCC.
Dr. Jack Barrett, Imperial College, London, UK.
Dr. Warren Berning, atmospheric physicist, New Mexico State University.
Dr. Jiri Blumel, Institute Sozialokon. Forschg. Usti nad Labem, Czech Republic.
Bruce Boe, atmospheric scientist and Director of the North Dakota Atmospheric Resources Board; member, American Meteorological Society; former Chairman,
AMS Committee on Planned and Inadvertent Weather Modification.
Dr. C.J.F. Bottcher, Chairman of the Board, The Global Institute for the Study of
Natural Resources, The Hague, The Netherlands; Professor Emeritus of physical chemistry, Leiden University; past President of the Science Policy Council
of The Netherlands; former member, Scientific Council for Government Policy;
former head of the Netherlands Delegation to the OECD Committee for Science
and Technology; author, The Science and Fiction of the Greenhouse Effect and
Carbon Dioxide; founding member of The Club of Rome.
Dr. Arthur Bourne, Professor, University of London, UK.
Larry H. Brace, physicist, former Director of the Planetary Atmospheres Branch,
NASA Goddard Space Flight Center; recipient NASA Medal for Exceptional Scientific Achievement.
Dr. Norman M.D. Brown, FRSC, Professor, University of Ulster.

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Dr. R.A.D. Byron-Scott, meteorologist, formerly senior lecturer in meteorology, Flinders Institute for Atmospheric and Marine Science, Flinders University, Adelaide, Australia.
Dr. Joseph Cain, Professor of planetary physics and geophysics, Geophysical Fluid
Dynamics Institute, Florida State University; elected Fellow, American Geophysical Union; formerly with NASA Goddard Space Flight Center (scientific
satellites) and the U.S. Geological Survey.
Dr. Gabriel T. Csanady, meteorologist, Eminent Professor, Old Dominion University,
Norfolk, Virginia.
Robert Cunningham, consulting meteorologist, Fellow, American Meteorological Society.
Dr. Fred W. Decker, Professor of meteorology, Oregon State University, Corvalis,
Oregon; elected Fellow, AAAS; member, RMS, NWA, AWA, AMS.
Lee W. Eddington, meteorologist, Naval Air Warfare Center.
Dr. Hugh Ellsaesser, atmospheric scientist, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (19631986); Participating Guest Scientist, Lawrence Livermore Natl. Lab.
(19861996), more than 40 refereed research papers and major reports in the
scientific literature.
Dr. John Emsley, Imperial College, London, UK.
Dr. Otto Franzle, Professor, University of Kiel, Germany.
Dr. C.R. de Freitas, climate scientist, University of Auckland, New Zealand, Editor
of the international journal Climate Research.
Dr. John E. Gaynor, Senior Meteorologist, Environmental Technology Laboratory,
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, Boulder, Colorado.
Dr. Tor Ragnar Gerholm, Professor Emeritus of Physics, University of Stockholm,
member of Nobel Prize selection committee for physics; member, Royal Swedish
Academy of Sciences and Royal Swedish Academy of Engineering Sciences, author of several books on science and technology.
Dr. Gerhard Gerlich, Professor, Technical University of Braunschweig.
Dr. Thomas Gold, Professor of astrophysics, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York.
Dr. H.G. Goodell, Professor, University of Virginia, Charlottesville.
James D. Goodridge, climatologist, formerly with California Dept. of Water Resources.
Dr. Adrian Gordon, meteorologist, University of South Australia.
Prof. Dr. Eckhard Grimmel, Professor, University Hamburg, Germany.
Dr. Nathaniel B. Guttman, Research Physical Scientist, National Climatic Data
Center, Asheville, North Carolina; former Professor of atmospheric sciences/climatology; former Chairman, AMS Committee on Applied Climatology.
Dr. Paul Handler, Professor of chemistry, University of Illinois.
Dr. Vern Harnapp, Professor, University of Akron, Ohio.
Dr. Howard C. Hayden, Professor of physics, University of Connecticut.
Dr. Michael J. Higatsberger, Professor and former Director, Institute for Experimental Physics, University of Vienna, Austria; former Director, Seibersdorf Research Center of the Austrian Atomic Energy Agency; former President, Austrian Physical Society.
Dr. Austin W. Hogan, meteorologist, co-editor of the journal Atmospheric Research.
Dr. William Hubbard, Professor, University of Arizona, Dept. of Planetary Sciences;
elected Fellow of the American Geophysical Union.
Dr. Heinz Hug, lecturer, Wiesbaden, Germany.
Dr. Zbigniew Jaworski, University of Warsaw, Poland.
Dr. Kelvin Kemm, nuclear physicist, Director, Technology Strategy Consultants,
Pretoria, South Africa; columnist, Engineering News; author, Techtrack: A
Winding Path of South African Development.
Dr. Robert L. Kovach, Professor of geophysics, Stanford University, Palo Alto, California.
Dr. David R. Legates, Professor of meteorology, University of Oklahoma.
Dr. Heinz H. Lettau, geophysicist, Increase A. Lapham Professor Emeritus, University of Wisconsin.
Dr. Henry R. Linden, Max McGraw Professor of Energy and Power Engineering and
Management, Director, Energy and Power Center, Illinois Institute of Technology; elected Fellow, American Institute of Chemical Engineers; former member, Energy Engineering Board of the National Research Council; member,
Green Technology Committee, National Academy of Engineering.
Dr. Richard S. Lindzen, Sloane Professor of Meteorology, Center for Meteorology
and Physical Meteorology, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge,
Massachusetts.
Dr. J. P. Lodge, atmospheric chemist, Boulder, Colorado.

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Dr. Anthony R. Lupo, atmospheric scientist, Professor, University of Missouri at Columbia, reviewer/contributing author, IPCC.
Dr. George E. McVehil, meteorologist, Englewood, Colorado.
Dr. Helmut Metzner, Professor, Tubingen, Germany.
Dr. Patrick J. Michaels, Professor and Director of the State Office of Climatology,
University of Virginia; more than 50 research articles published in scientific
journals; past President, American Association of State Climatologists; author,
Sound and Fury: The Science and Politics of Global Warming (1992); reviewer/
contributing author, IPCC.
Sir William Mitchell, physicist, University of Oxford, U.K.
Dr. Asmunn Moene, former chief of Meteorology, Oslo, Norway.
Laim Nagle, energy/engineering specialist, Cornfield University, UK.
Robert A. Neff, former U.S. Air Force meteorologist: member, AMS, AAAS.
Dr. William A. Nierenberg, Director Emeritus, Scripps Institute of Oceanography,
La Jolla, California; Professor Emeritus of oceanography, University of California at San Diego; former member, Council of the U.S. National Academy of
Science; former Chairman, National Research Councils Carbon Dioxide Assessment Committee; former member, U.S. EPA Global Climate Change Committee;
former Assistant Secretary General of NATO for scientific affairs; former Chairman, National Advisory Committee on Oceans and Atmospheres.
Dr. William Porch, atmospheric physicist, Los Alamos National Laboratory, New
Mexico.
Dr. Harry Priem, Professor of geology, University of Utrecht.
Dr. William E. Reifsnyder, Professor Emeritus of biometeorology, Yale University;
elected Fellow, American Association for the Advancement of Science; former
Chairman, National Academy of Science/National Research Council Committee
on Climatology; AMS Award for Outstanding Achievement in Biometeorology.
Dr. Alexander Robertson, meteorologist, Adjunct Professor, Memorial University of
Newfoundland, Canada; author of more than 200 scientific and technical publications in biometeorology and climatology, forestry, forest ecology, urban environmental forestry, and engineering technology.
Dr. Thomas Schmidlin, CCM, Professor of meteorology/climatology, Kent State University, Ohio; Editor, Ohio Journal of Science; elected Fellow, Ohio Academy of
Science; member, AMS.
Dr. Frederick Seitz, physicist, former President, Rockefeller University, former
President, U.S. National Academy of Sciences; former member, Presidents
Science Advisory Committee; recipient, U.S. National Medal of Science.
Dr. Gary D. Sharp, Executive Director, Center for Climate/Ocean Resources Study
and the Cooperative Institute for Research in the Integrated Ocean Sciences;
contributed to the initial development of the Climate Change Program of the
National Oceanic And Atmospheric Administration; investigated climate-related
resource variabilities, sustainable development, and basic environmental climatology for the UN, World Bank, and USAID.
Dr. S. Fred Singer, atmospheric physicist; President, The Science & Environmental
Policy Project; former Director, U.S. Weather Satellite Service; Professor Emeritus of environmental science, University of Virginia; former Chairman, federal
panel investigating effects of the SST on stratospheric ozone; author or editor
of 16 books, including Global Climate Change (1989) and Hot Talk, Cold
Science: Global Warmings Unfinished Debate (1997).
Dr. A. F. Smith, chemical engineer (ret.), Jacksonville, Florida.
Dr. Fred J. Starheim, Professor, Kent State University.
Dr. Chauncey Starr, President Emeritus, Electric Power Research Institute; winner,
1992 National Medal of Engineering.
Dr. Robert E. Stevenson, Secretary General Emeritus, International Association for
the Physical Sciences of the Oceans, and a leading world authority on space
oceanography; more than 100 research articles published in scientific journals;
author of seven books; advisor to NASA, NATO, U.S. National Academy of
Science, and the European Geophysical Society.
Dr. George Stroke, Professor, Max Planck Institute for Meteorology, Munich, Germany.
Dr. Heinz Sundermann, University of Vienna, Austria.
Dr. George H. Sutton, Professor Emeritus, University of Hawaii.
Dr. Arlen Super, meteorologist, U.S. Bureau of Reclamation, Lakewood, Colorado.
Dr. Vladimir Svidersky, Professor, Sechenoc Institute, Moscow, Russia.
Dr. M. Talwani, geophysicist, Rice University, Houston, Texas.
Dr. W. F. Tanner, Professor, Florida State University.
Peter Arnold Toynbee, chemical engineer, F. Institute of Energy, London, England.
Dr. Christiaan Van Sumere, Professor, University of Gent, Belgium.

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Dr. Robin Vaugh, physicist, University of Dundee, UK.
Dr. Robert C. Wentworth, geophysicist, Oakland, California, formerly with Lochheed
Reseach Laboratory.
Dr. Robert C. Whitten, physicist, formerly with NASA.
Dr. Klaus Wyrtki, Professor Emeritus, University of Hawaii Sea Level Center.
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Mr. ROHRABACHER. Thank you very much and with that, thank
you very much. I look forward to working with you to making sure
we get the most out of our research dollars and that we become energy sufficient, self-sufficient in the years ahead. Thank you very
much.
Chairman BOEHLERT. And let the Chair note that he looks forward to our continued working partnership and I dont consider
you a skunk at the lawn party. First of all, this is not a lawn party
and secondly, you referred to yourself in that manner. I refer to
you as a valid colleague and hope springs eternal. One day we
might succeed in convincing you that global climate change is for
real. With that, the Chair
Mr. ROHRABACHER. Its only who causes it thats the real debate
here.
Chairman BOEHLERT. With that, the Chair is pleased to recognize the gentleman from Illinois, Mr. Lipinski.

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Mr. LIPINSKI. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. I want to start out by
echoing one of the things that Mr. Rohrabacher had said in applauding the President for coming forward in the State of the
Union Address and talking about a vision or making it a priority
that we do improve technology, we improve education in math and
science, produce more engineers and also energy independence.
These are fantastic ideas and these are things that we need to be
working on. Im afraid that what we really are at here now is
where the rubber meets the road and there are some places where
already it seems to be slipping, that there isnt the commitment to
this vision from the Administration. But before I get into that, I
want to start byunfortunately, Dr. Bartletts not here. Earlier on,
he spoke about the importance of training engineersand sometimes I feel guilty.
I used to be an engineer; got degrees in actually, a Bachelors
and a Masters in engineering and I dont practice engineering, but
I sometimes feel guilty for doing that, come here and talk about the
importance of engineers and having more engineers and I left all
that behind, but Dr. Bartlett even made it worse when he was talking about going fromwe have too many lawyers and too many political scientists, not enough engineers. I went from being an engineer, I got my Ph.D. in political science and therefore I went apparently to the dark side, but I try to redeem myself here and I think
the engineering background helps me tremendously, engineering
about problem solving. Thats what we are here to do in Congress,
were all here, is to solve problems. Now, I look back at what inspired me to become an engineer and it was really my education
before I got to college.
And Im very disappointed that the Math and Science Partnership Program is being cut drastically. The amount proposed this
year will only fund those existing grants. I just think its a tremendous way to getI was also a college professor. I think its great
to be able to get those at the college level involved with the high
school levels, other levels, elementary education, in order to inspire
kids to go ahead and go into science, math, engineering. Dr.
Bement, whats the reasonis there some reason for cutting that?
Is the Administration not seeing it as effective or what is the purpose of that?
Dr. BEMENT. My answer to that, Mr. Lipinski, is that the Math
and Science Partnership came subsequent to Systemic Initiative
support from the Foundation and those test beds provided a tremendous amount of understanding of good practice and also the
importance of getting community involvement, as well as business
sector involvement in education to go from commitment to involvement. Those lessons have been learned, but theyve been learned
in a program that could only reach a few dozen school districts.
The time has come now to take those lessons learned and to implement them and propagate them more broadly among the 15,000
school districts that we have in the country and one cant really
argue that the Administration is not paying attention to education
when
really,
theyre
focused
on
implementation
and
propagation
Mr. LIPINSKI. Okay, my times very short. I dont think that
weve figured out all the answers. Yes, I agree we need to propa-

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gate it, but I think theres more to learn. I think we could put more
of thatI have to move on quickly. I just want to add Im very
glad, happy that the Chairman is committed to MEP. In my district, manufacturing has declined tremendously. Manufacturers are
coming to me and saying we need some kind of help in order to
compete and this is one way thats been provenone program
thats proven to help the American manufacturers compete. One
last thing, Mr. Gutknecht mentionedtalking about DARPAif
Dr. Marburger maybe would comment on a bill that Ranking Member Gordon introduced to create ARPAE, which is ARPA for Energy. If youre familiar with that and what your thoughts are on
it?
Dr. MARBURGER. First of all, I want to declare I am familiar with
DARPA because when I was doing active science, I got a lot of my
research support from the early DARPA. At that time it was called
ARPA and I was doing very basic research, by the way. Similar
programs were also funded by the National Science Foundation and
other agencies at that time. My view about these types of organizations that we can imagine can be effective in agencies, my view is
that we should listen to the Cabinet officials and administrators
and directors of those agencies to seewhom we rely on to guide
the agency, manage it to get the maximum benefit of our taxpayer
dollars. We should rely on their judgment and so in the American
Competitiveness Initiative, we did not put in a lot of requirements
on these high-priority agencies that are testifying here today.
We decided that we would propose to increase their budgets and
then let them decide if they needed to propose additional mechanisms and reorganizations within their agencies and they may well
do that, either now or later on in the program after allwe have
a commitment to continue to increase their budgets over a period
of years. It may well be that in subsequent budgets or even in the
near future agencies may decide that they need to change their organization to spend these funds more effectively. Were going to
rely on the Presidentially appointed leadership of those agencies to
tell us what the most important thing to do with those funds is.
Chairman BOEHLERT. Thank you very much.
Mr. LIPINSKI. Thank you. I thank all of you for the work that
youre doing and Doctor, Im very happy that NSF is getting an increase in funding this year.
Dr. MARBURGER. Thank you.
Chairman BOEHLERT. Thank you very much. Dr. Schwarz.
Mr. SCHWARZ. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Very briefly. Im not
going to cut into anybodys lunch time here. I know better. First,
thank you very much to the American Competitiveness Initiative,
think big, please, think big whether its nuclear or nano or bio,
think big and go get them. And there are people out there who
would set up barriers in this country. There are Luddites among
us and we know that, you know that. I can think of several. The
trial bar comes to mind, but whos thinking? Question. What has
happened with the rare isotope accelerator? Whats going on, Secretary Bodman, Dr. Bement, perhaps can tell me. My interest is because I dont quite, but represent everything around Michigan
State University which has one of the largest accelerators in the
country and is ready, willing and able and then, in the Midwest,

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as well, Argonne, I know, was in the mix, so whats happened,
whats going on, when is this going to move forward? The research
community, at least the nuclear research community feels this is
a very important project.
Secretary BODMAN. Im aware of the interest in Michigan and Illinois. We look very hard at the importance of the RIA program.
It is important. As we allocated the funds and looked at the potential increases that were dealing with, this is a billion to a billion
and a half dollar project, to build it and operate it and we simply
couldnt afford it with everything else that were doing. We think
its important, so we have a program in place that over the next
five years will be spending funds in significant amounts, $5, $6
million a year to fund this activity and to work with foreign-based
partners who are already in this business, both in Germany and in
Canada, I know are two of the three that are being considered. In
the year 2011, thats when we are planning, at least as we look forward to the flow of funds in this department, we would be looking
forward to doing preliminary engineering design and so in effect,
its going to be put off five years; thats at least as we see it. And
I know thats not happy news for you, nor will it be happy news
for Congresswoman Biggert, who has departed, but those are the
facts as we see it.
Mr. SCHWARZ. I just wanted to assure you, Mr. Secretary, that
Michigan State University is ready and willing whenever you are.
Thank you, sir.
Secretary BODMAN. Thank you, sir.
Chairman BOEHLERT. Ready to go, huh? Mr. Matheson.
Mr. MATHESON. Thanks, Mr. Chairman. Thanks, everybody, for
being here today and Secretary Bodman, I appreciate your being
here. We had a discussion last year, at this very hearingit was
right after you became Secretaryabout the uranium mill tailings
pile near Moab, Utah and a lot has happened since we had that
discussion a year ago. As you know, the environmental impact
statement process was completed and the record of decision decided
that the pile should be moved, which is, of course, as you may recall what I was hoping would happen and Im glad that it has and
that that decision has been made to move forward.
I wanted to discuss with you, though, what the next steps going
to be because its going to be, roughly speaking, a $450 million
project to move this pile. Its the largest of all the mill tailings piles
the DOEs been in charge of that theyve had to move. This is much
bigger in scale than the others. And the reason I want to talk to
you about it is I was concerned with the budget that was submitted
last week where we see a reduction in the recommended amount
to be spent on removal of this pile. The budget rates for this year
is $22.8 million, which is actually almost 20 percent less than what
was appropriated in the current fiscal year for this project and Im
concerned that we may be getting into a circumstance where this
is going to drag out not over eight years to move this pile, but 22
years or longer and wanted to know if you had any insight into
what the decision making was about dropping the budgeting down
and stretching this program out or if you had any information you
could share with me on that?

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Secretary BODMAN. First of all, Im happy that you seem to be
happy that we made a decision to move forward with this, sir. Secondly, I think its an error, which often seems to happen in the government where there is a correlation between the amount of money
spent in a particular year and the physical process or the things
that must be done. I do know I dont have all the details. I would
be happy to give them to you in writing, but I do believe that
theres an environmental impact statement that has to be done and
that there is work that will be done in 2007 preparing the place
where the tailings will be placed and so there is quite a rigorous
program that has been laid out and that we expect to make the
schedules that, you know, as advertised. If you think that its going
to be 22 years
Mr. MATHESON. I hope not.
Secretary BODMAN.I would be happy to investigate that and
see to it that thats not the case.
Mr. MATHESON. I hope its not and I hope that just in the name
of short-term savings we dont get into a longer term as Im sure
you know where Im coming from. In the long run sometimes,
youre better off spending more money up front than letting something get stretched out over time. At the end of the day, we end
up spending more taxpayer money when we let things get stretched
out for a long period of time.
Secretary BODMAN. Well, you are quite right about that and
were seeing that in a number of different areas. On the other
hand, I am satisfied that this Department, in the past, has not distinguished itself at times, particularly in the environmental management area, in having rushed into something without adequate
planning and without an adequate discussion of exactly what its
going to cost and how long it will take. And Iwere trying to do
this in a rigorous fashion.
Mr. MATHESON. Understood.
Secretary BODMAN. I hope you appreciate that.
Mr. MATHESON. I do, and if I could justI may send you just a
quick written question, if we can just get a sense of what the Department views the schedule over the next few years for doing that,
Id really appreciate that.
Secretary BODMAN. Be happy to do it, sir.
Mr. MATHESON. Okay, thank you. And with that, Ill yield back,
Mr. Chairman.
Chairman BOEHLERT. The gentleman from Texas, Mr. Hall.
Mr. HALL. Chairman, I thank you and Im looking for some
happy news. Im looking for better news than I expect. I think all
of us agree with Mr. Rohrabacher and the other gentlemen and ladies that have discussed here today about economic growth in our
country and how we depend on knowledge based industries and resources. To that end, I dont think theres any question that this
years budget proposal seeks to bolster math and science education.
The President mentioned it in his speech the other evening. Ive
heard it from almost every podium how important it is and I agree
with it. It provides jobs for citizens and solutions to their problems.
One of the most important, though, and one of the greatest challenges today, I think, is energy and all of us agree that we need
to move toward what they call energy independence and Ive heard,

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Mr. Bodman, you speak about the 60 percent reliability we have on
people that maybe dont trust us totally or we dont trust them or
were fearful of it.
Ive heard the President make similar statements and I certainly
agree with him. And Im pleased to see that the budget highlights
alternative fuel technology; solar, biomass, nuclear, hydrogen and
clean coal and all of these are going to help us, but I must say that
Im a little distressed to see that the Administration has also chosen to zero out some very important oil and gas research programs.
If we want to become energy independent from foreign sources,
then we need to support innovation in this area, I think, to the hilt
and Secretary Bodman, as you know, independent producers drill
about 90 percent of the Nations wells and produce 85 percent of
the Nations oil and gas, so this isnt something that were pitching
to the majors that report huge profits every year and something
that maybe the people feel that they ought to be having to put
some of that back in the refineries or helping us with their energy
problems.
Now, Ill subscribe to most of that, but troubling to me is the Administrations proposal to end a program that weve all passed
here, this committees passed them for the last four years. I passed
the budget, the ultra-deep arrangement three times as a Democrat
and once as a Republican. It survived the conference committee
each time and I think its the will of this Congress. And I wont
get into the royalty waivers because ultra-deep program doesnt
have any such waivers. We excluded those waivers from this. We
knew it would be objectionable. We didnt put that in there.
But the programs designed for independent producers, not the
majors. They help out by taking it over afterwards, and dozens of
universities, companies all across this country and research labs
everywhere are ready to move in and carry out this energy bill that
we just proposed, but I think the thing that concerns me most and
maybe you can explain it a little bit better to me, I sure hope you
can, because Im really concerned about it and the Department of
Energy, FY 2007 Presidential budget request and the budget highlights on page 50, where it lays out their fossil energy research and
development and under natural gas technologies and petroleum/oil
technologies, for FY 2007 request is zeroed out. Is that correct? Is
that the recommendation of the Department of Energy?
Secretary BODMAN. It is the recommendation of the Administration, yes, Mr. Hall.
Mr. HALL. Then I wont ask you to express your opinion on it at
this time, but Im going to want to talk to you about it later and
maybe ask you to give us some more information on it.
Secretary BODMAN. Well, Id be happy to provide any information, sir, as I can.
Mr. HALL. You always have been and Im very hopeful that we
can work something out on this, but at page 52 of the report it
says, The FY 2007 budget proposed to terminate the oil technology
and natural gas technologies research and development programs.
Federal staff paid from the program direction account will continue
to work toward an orderly termination of this program. What federal staff would that have been?

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Secretary BODMAN. This is the staff that is working on the research and development programs in the laboratoriesas well as
in the Energy Department.
Mr. HALL. And you have access to that?
Secretary BODMAN. Do I have access to that?
Mr. HALL. Do you have access to it?
Secretary BODMAN. Yes, sir.
Mr. HALL. Let me be more specific. We get to the ultra-deep
water and unconventional natural gas and other petroleum research fund that weve created; for 10 years weve been trying to
pass an energy bill. For four years weve had these provisions in
it and the request, it states that ultra-deep water and unconventional natural gas and other petroleum research fund was created
by the Energy Policy Act of 2005 as a mandatory program beginning in FY 2007. The program would be funded for mandatory federal revenues from oil and gas leases. The budget proposes to repeal the program through a future legislative proposal consistent
with the decision to terminate the discretionary oil and gas programs. And FY 2005 shows the current appropriation and goes on
through the FY 2007, that theyre zeroed out. Are you aware of
that?
Secretary BODMAN. Yes, sir, Im aware of it.
Mr. HALL. All right, then, might I ask you if you intend to try
to repeal the program through a future legislative proposal, what
type proposal would that be?
Secretary BODMAN. Well, I think youll find that the Congress
will receive from the Administration a proposal to rescind that portion of the Energy Bill that deals with this particular program. My
further understanding, sir, is that Congress, in passing the bill and
the President, in signing the bill and creating the bill, has provided
for the funding of this particular program starting in the year 2007
and that to the extent that Congress does not respond favorably to
the proposal from the Administration, this Department will obey
the law and well just
Mr. HALL. Well, I know youll do that. My arguments not directly with you, its with the decision thats been made somewhere.
Secretary BODMAN. I understand, but Im just telling you that
my understanding is that there is funding provided, that its mandatory and we will pursue the matter. We have already done that
which the law requires us to do. We have conducted the solicitation, the responses to the solicitation have been submitted and we
are in the process of evaluating those at the current time.
Chairman BOEHLERT. Thank you very much. Gentlemans time
has expired. Chair recognizes Mr. Wu.
Mr. HALL. In that case, I yield back my time.
Chairman BOEHLERT. Mr. Wu.
Mr. WU. Thank you very much, Mr. Chairman. I fully support
the Presidents initiative to increase funding for greater competitiveness and innovation in America, but our budget, as passed, is
simply not consistent with these goals. Immediately after the President made these proposals in the State of the Union Address, we
cut college student financial aid by $12 billion and that was an Administration proposal to cut college financial aid by $12 billion.
Weve got to walk the walk as well as talk the talk. Competitive-

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ness is, in large part, about job creation and I can see nothing more
important than a college education. It is also about job retention
and we must work to make the Presidents competitiveness initiative more than just words and rhetoric; our citizens deserve that.
Research and development funding should be increased overall and
not just for the favorite few programs at the expense of the rest.
Again, weve got to walk the walk as well as talk the talk.
The Administration seeks to completely gut the Advanced Technology Program and to decrease funding for the Manufacturing Extension Partnership, two programs with a proven record of creating
and retaining manufacturing jobs today and into the future. We
need results, not just empty promises and faulty reasoning. We in
Congress have consistently stood our ground and increased overall
science and technology investment above and beyond the Administrations request and I encourage my colleagues to continue to do
so.
Dr. Marburger, I have a couple of questions for you. It has been
two years since allegations of scientific manipulation and censorship were first made against this Administration. Despite your assurances that these claims had no validity whatsoever and that you
were looking into this very important matter, allegations have continued to surface. They are not confined to a single office or agency.
The recent incidents concerning Dr. Hansen at NASA, the reports
about problems at NOAA, the mysterious transformation of the
Technology Administrations report on off-shoring, and the suspension of a forest research grant at Oregon State University suggest
that these problems are continuing in the Federal Government.
Despite your assurances to the contrary, it appears that this Administration continues to confuse the roles of science policy and
politics. It seems to many that information inconsistent with a favored political message is being suppressed and I submit to you,
sir, that it is not just in science. Thats exactly what happened in
the Intelligence Committee and thats why we are stuck in a situation in the Middle East. It is time to stop politicizing science and
muzzling scientists. This incident involving the publication of
Science, in my home State, of a forest regeneration study by a student from Oregon State University is truly, truly troubling.
The Bureau of Land Management suspended the federal research
grant that funded this work, suspended it based on trumped up
charges that the authors had violated a grant agreement. BLM almost immediately reversed itself in a firestorm of controversy and
the grant suspension has been lifted, but the chilling effect of the
BLM action continues to reverberate in the academic community.
Dr. Marburger, this is a very serious problem. Why are we still
learning about these incidents of scientific suppression two years
after you wrote to this committee and this Congress assuring us
that scientific integrity was not a problem in this Administration?
For an Administration that takes more than a dozen hours to report a shooting, two years is a very, very long time and we still
have this problem. Why is that so?
Dr. MARBURGER. Congressman, I couldnt agree more with the
undesirability of politicizing science. Unfortunately, science does
have a credibility that stands by itself and everyone who has an
opinion or an idea wants to grab a little of that credibility to bol-

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ster their own opinion. Im not familiar with the case in Oregon
State University and Id be glad to look into it and respond to you
and to any other specific incidents that you would like to direct me
to. I personally believe, based on my own observation and interviews with leadership in the agencies, that there is not, in fact, an
effort by this Administration to censor science or politicize it in any
way.
Mr. WU. Dr. Marburger, what has your office done specifically to
investigate the many, many allegations?
Dr. MARBURGER. Whenever I hear of an allegation of this sort,
I ask for a briefing on it either through my staff or directly from
the agency where the incident occurred. I get all of the
information
Mr. WU. Since my time is expiring, maybe we could have another
answer in writing addressing each of the specific incidents and we
would appreciate receiving that.
Dr. MARBURGER. I would be glad to do so.
Mr. WU. And perhaps we could further bolster your efforts by
asking for a GAO report on the same topic, investigating whether
these incidents are real and perhaps we could also get the National
Academy of Sciences involved at some point.
Chairman BOEHLERT. The gentlemans time has expired. Gentleman from South Carolina, Mr. Inglis.
Mr. INGLIS. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. I apologize for being late
to this hearing. Ms. Jackson Lee and I were just finished at the
mark up in Judiciary, so were happy to be here now talking about
these topics. And Dr. Bement, you have talked and the National
Academy of Sciences has, I think, suggested that the icebreakers
in the Antarctic Program be owned by the Coast Guard rather than
charged to the NSF. This budget this year, again, has the money
coming from the NSF. Any hope that were going to get to implement that recommendation that we get those back to the responsibility of the Coast Guard?
Dr. BEMENT. I dont recall actually making that statement. We
have established an MOU with the Coast Guard, in which case the
Coast Guard retains operational responsibility for the icebreakers
and we have the responsibility for tasking the Coast Guard for the
use of icebreakers. Based on that tasking, they then present us
with a plan and then we negotiate the price and sometimes those
negotiations are tough.
Mr. INGLIS. Let me make sure, I didnt mean to indicate that you
had said anything about the icebreakers being transferred back to
Coast Guard; the National Academy of Sciences has recommended
that and Im inclined to agree with that recommendation, so is a
way of freeing up funds in your budget would be my main goal in
transferring back to Coast Guard.
Dr. BEMENT. We certainly appreciate your interest in that and
were also looking forward to the final report by the National Research Council on the issue.
Mr. INGLIS. Its helpful. I guess its a question that has a direction to it. In other words, some hope that we can move back to a
situation where the NSF budget is not taxed by those doing the
icebreaking operations.

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And for all of the witnesses, one of the challenges, I suppose, in
running your agencies is identifying the truly innovative projects
and devoting resources to those, and these are the high-risk kind
of breakthrough technologies. If you could give us a couple of lines
on how it is in your agency you attempt to focus some resources
on the truly innovative realizing that youve got to balance that
with the things that will be yielding practical results soon and anybody that wants to start, Id be happy to
Secretary BODMAN. Id be happy to start and we are working on
broadening the types of feedstock that can be used to manufacture
ethanol from corn or sugar cane to less valuable materials to socalled switch grass or corn stover or other materials and the President has asked for and provided for roughly, a $50 million increase
from roughly $100 million to $150 million that will enable us. Before, I think, we were focusing entirely on the corn stover. We will
now be able to work on a variety of feedstock. So thats one area.
And the second one is in the solar energy and we are quite optimistic that by using also an additional $50 million approximately
that has been indicated for that program. We will do a solicitation
and be looking at the improvement of the efficiency of affordable
cells that are currently making electricity at a price of roughly 20
to 25 cents. We need to cut that in half and there are some approaches that we have talked about that we believe have the potential. Its not certainty, but the potential of substantially reducing
that, maybe cutting it in half, so those would be two suggestions.
Dr. SAMPSON. At Commerce, were focusing, in this budget increase, on nanotechnology, moving from just a pure art; research
on the lab bench from nanotechnology to application in the manufacturing context. Secondly, hydrogen; the hydrogen economy, the
safe manufacture, storage, sale of hydrogen. And then thirdly,
quantum information science. If were successful in moving down
the road toward quantum computing, it will result in computers
that can solve the most complex cases in seconds that todays most
advanced supercomputers could not solve in years and so those are
the areas that are identified for R&D funding at NIST.
Chairman BOEHLERT. Gentlemans timeall right. Go to it. The
wrong part, the end of the table.
Mr. INGLIS. No, I say youre at the beginning of the table.
Chairman BOEHLERT. Yes.
Dr. BEMENT. Let me say, Mr. Inglis, that the number one priority
at the Foundation is moving the frontier forward, advancing the
frontier, so that it would take a very long time to go through examples, but beyond that, let me say that we are trying to promote
high-risk research. We do that by giving our program officers up
to five percent of their budget to invest in new ideas that are scientifically feasible but also entail high risk. Each of our directors
have part of their budget set aside, peer reviewed activities, but
they are also oriented toward high-risk research. And finally, I
could mention the LIGO experiment, which is Laser Interferometer
Gravitational Wave Observatory, to measure gravitational waves.
That is really an example of very high-risk research in terms of the
level of investment, but also the precision of measurement required. As a result of that investment, we have advanced optics
technology, weve advanced laser technology and weve advanced

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active and passive damping technology beyond anyones imagination.
Mr. INGLIS. Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
Chairman BOEHLERT. Thank you and the gentlemans time is expired. Earlier in an exchange with Secretary Bodman, Mr. Honda
asked some very important questions and its our understanding
now, in checking with the staff, that you did include in your testimony answers to the questions from Mr. Honda. Were going to
bring those to his attention and so we hope he will be satisfied that
you have been responsive in a timely fashion. If hes not satisfied,
then well hold his hand and call you up and say we want more.
Secretary BODMAN. Here they are, sir.
Chairman BOEHLERT. Okay, thank you.
Secretary BODMAN. They were delivered on October 26, 2005
and
Chairman BOEHLERT. Fine, and I think that was not brought to
Mr. Hondas attention and it will be, so thank you very much, Mr.
Secretary, for your responsiveness. Chair recognizes Ms. Jackson
Lee.
Ms. JACKSON LEE. Thank you, Mr. Chairman, for this very important hearing. Im delighted my colleague shared with you that
we were unavoidably detained in a mark up in Judiciary. Needless
to say, this is a crucial hearing for America. As we sit here today,
I think we can be very confident that China now graduates more
scientists in the multiple disciplines than we do in a year. So we
know that there are challenges that we have to confront together
and you all present in a wonderful array of disciplines. But as we
have made the very complementary, if you will, support statements
as relates to the Presidents American Competitiveness Initiative,
might I, for the record, restate which I know has already been restated, that despite these increases, the overall federal Science and
Technology budget has been cut by one percent.
Even in the face of the tragedy of the tsunami, we find that
NOAA, indeed, for oceanic and atmospheric research has declined
by eight percent even though NASA and NIH are, in fact, flat. We
also see that DOE sustains major cuts throughout energy efficiency
and for the second year, DOE would have to eliminate the Gas and
Oil Technologies Program. On the other hand, I think there are
some opportunities that we have if we can shed ourselves of the
partisanship that seems to plague this terrible shortage and question of science and technology proudness in American. For example,
the Presidents budget would double basic R&D in physical sciences
at some of our agency in 10 years, frankly, many of us who are
Democrats believe it should be done in five years. We cannot wait.
Some would say that we cannot fall behind on our clock.
In addition, I think it is important to note, for those of us who
live in the inner city and rural districts, broadband access is paltry.
There are no new federal investment in broadband access. That
speaks poorly of a nation who is at the cutting edge of research.
And then, as I said earlier, this particular budget fails to provide
adequate funding to invest in the development of clean, sustainable
energy alternatives such as bio-based fuels, as well as new engine
technologies for flexible fuel vehicles. Of course, I come from the
energy capital of the world and I am certainly not going to step

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away from that. Were proud, in Houston, Texas, to have a number
of major oil companies and gas companies who are on the cutting
edge of technology, but as we well know, the Internet was created
by the wisdom of government scientists, no matter what anyone
might articulate, and therefore, I know that we can do a better job
in alternative fuel.
So I have a number of questions that I hope I can have reasonable time for you to respond. First of all, Secretary of Energy, Dr.
Bodman, might I say to you we need to see you more. In these
months of crisis with energy prices soaring, the question of the environment versus energy, the question of the whole issue of, as I
said, gas technology, oil technology and alternative fuels, frankly,
I dont know how the energy policy of America has been articulated. I frankly dont believe it should be articulated from the Administration with closed door meetings. Youre the Secretary of Energy. We need to see you more. And I think there needs to be policies that are progressive and innovative that are bipartisan.
I was not sure of the line of questioning that my good friend and
colleague, Mr. Hall, was approaching you with, but I know very
well the details of the royalty provisions because they were passed
under the Clinton Administration and at the time, I supported
them, coming from Houston, Texas. I frankly thought there was
reason, in order to encourage the domestic development here in the
United States. But I believe this Administration owes a responsibility to this nation to look at those royalties and assess whether
they are viable at this time when we are struggling economically,
particularly in the sciences and looking at alternative sources of
fuel. Why not use those dollars, why not waive those royalties as
we speak and provide those dollars to be invested back in science
and alternative fuel?
So let me start, Dr. Marburger, and Dr. Bement can answer
these, as well. To the good graces of this committee, we passed legislation signed by the President that established the Dr. Mae
Jemison Grant Programyou may be familiar with her math and
science outreach. Id like to know your sense of whether those
kinds of programs should be funded. When I say math and science
outreach to minorities and others and women to avoid statements
to encourage young people to be engaged in the sciences. The bill
was passed through the authorization and signed by the President.
Do you believe those kinds of programs should be supported? Dr.
Bement, if you would comment on that, as well. Secretary Bodman,
if you would comment on why you dont have enough money for
federal funding of alternative fuels and why you continue with
Yucca Mountain.
Chairman BOEHLERT. Just let the Chair observe that you used
the entire five minutes to ask a series of questions and to answer
all of the questions adequately, I think it would take another 10
to 15 minutes and so the panelists will have your questions and I
would ask the panelists to respond in writing to the specific questions made by Ms. Jackson Lee.
Ms. JACKSON LEE. Well, Mr. Chairman, I beg your
Chairman BOEHLERT. The Chair has

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Ms. JACKSON LEE. If they can ask for oneIf they can answer
the question each in one minute, I think that would be appropriate
and then they can answer the rest
Chairman BOEHLERT. But the Chair would observe, and Ive been
in the Chair a long time and youve been a valued Member of the
Committee for a long time, but that when you use all the time allotted to you just to ask a series of questions and then have every
right to expect answers to them, but that is going to be very time
consuming. There are other members of the panel who also have
an interest in picking the brains of these very distinguished gentlemen and we want answer to our questions, too. The Chair has always been generous and I will be generous now and I will give
them an opportunity to respond, but I also want them to respond
to the last question specifically and the other questions in writing
because quite frankly, Im not prepared to sit here until this
evening to get all the answers to all the questions.
Ms. JACKSON LEE. Well, Mr. Chairman, if the gentleman would
yield
Chairman BOEHLERT. Ill be glad to yield.
Ms. JACKSON LEE. Dr. Marburger and Dr. Bementis ithow do
you pronounce your name, sir? What is it?
Dr. BEMENT. Bement.
Ms. JACKSON LEE. Bement.
Chairman BOEHLERT. And Dr. Marburger?
Ms. JACKSON LEE. Yes, to answer
Chairman BOEHLERT. Dr. Bement?
Ms. JACKSON LEE.the question on the Dr. Mae Jamison Program and Id like the Secretary to answer in one minute about the
royalties. If there are other questions that they can answer in
writing
Chairman BOEHLERT. Gentlemen, the Floor is yours.
Ms. JACKSON LEE.I would appreciate
Chairman BOEHLERT. Well start with Dr. Marburger.
Ms. JACKSON LEE. This is a serious hearing, Mr. Chairman. I
thank the
Chairman BOEHLERT. This is a serious hearing and as youve observed, you were forced out of the hearing because you had a very
serious hearing in Judiciary Committee
Ms. JACKSON LEE. Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
Chairman BOEHLERT.and all of us have a lot of serious business that dont relate directly to this committee, but we all have
to be considerate of the time constraints on our colleagues and our
very distinguished witnesses. So with that, Dr.
Marburger
Ms. JACKSON LEE. I appreciate that.
Chairman BOEHLERT.please respond specifically.
Ms. JACKSON LEE. Im always considerate.
Dr. BEMENT. Thank you, Congresswoman. In fact, I do believe
that programs to encourage young people from all classes and socioeconomic levels and under-represented groups to study science,
technology, engineering, mathematics fields, the so-called STEM
fields, are very important. I think that scholarship programs like
that are good and I advocate these types of programs because they
have an important impact on all of young people, not just under-

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represented minorities. Let me state that this is one of our highest
priorities. If you look at a cluster of programs that have very high
impact, like TCUP, HBCUUP, CREST, AGEP, LSAMP, and Noyce
Program, collectively, we have increased those budgets on the average of 22.4 percent in 07 budget and these programs are joined
and theyre cooperative collaborations both from our EHR directorate as well as our Research and Related Activities directorate,
so we have a full court press in this area.
Chairman BOEHLERT. Mr. Secretary, would you respond?
Secretary BODMAN. First of all, the Interior Department is the
department that deals with the matters of royalties. Secondly, my
understanding is that President Clinton, under his leadership in
the late 90s passed a law that would relieve the oil companies, as
a part of their program, from paying royalties in order to stimulate
more oil and gas drilling. That was the object. Apparently, he was
successful.
Ms. JACKSON LEE. We dont need it now.
Secretary BODMAN. Im sorry?
Ms. JACKSON LEE. We dont need it now.
Secretary BODMAN. I understand that. On the other hand, a deal
was made and a contract was drawn. I have spent a lot of my time
since I came to this Administration traveling the world, visiting
with other countries, talking about the sanctity of contracts and
making an agreement and I think that if the deal were changed at
this point in time, even in the face of the profitability that the oil
and gas companies have, in my judgment, that would be an error.
Could they live with it? I would imagine that they could. Could I
live with it? I certainly could. But its not something that I would
advocate.
Chairman BOEHLERT. I would hope that when we revise and extend our remarks, we talk about commitments or arrangements.
Too many deals made in Washington that offend a lot of people,
but I must admit, Ms. Jackson Lee has touched on a subject that
hits all of us right here and shes got some merit to what shes saying and Im really concerned about that and so thats something
youre going to be hearing more about from us on a bipartisan
basis. With that, the Chair will recognize, and I would note, Ms.
Jackson Lee, that Ive given you double the amount of time accorded some other Members
Ms. JACKSON LEE. Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
Chairman BOEHLERT.because theyre thoughtful questions and
I appreciate them. Mr. Miller.
Mr. MILLER. Thank you. Dr. Marburger, I know that youre in a
hurry this morning, but I really urge you to go back and read this
article again. It is apparent, based upon your summary of the article that you read it entirely too quickly. The last paragraph that
says, I am thus left with nothing to report, only refers to that
portion of the column that begins here, and that is a discussion of
how five research scientists at Caltech, and I assume research scientists at Caltech are the real deal. I mean, thats a pretty good
school, right? That since that report that had found such disfavor,
they had never gotten a federal research grant again.
Now, the reason that this whole matter came to this columnists
attention was that there was an article just a couple, three weeks

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ago, there was some press coverage two or three weeks ago that
one of the worlds leading preeminent climate scientists, Jim Hansen of NASA, was being urged to soften what he had to say by a
NASA spokesman and the NASA spokesman had resigned and that
she said shed gotten many calls of other instances that the columnist said, how does she describe it? All were from people with
similar tales of government funded scientists intimidated by heavy
handed public relations departments, and she pursued one of the
stories, which was this one. What she says is that all of that part
of the story is confirmed, referring to the part above, how theyve
never gotten a grant and they believed it wasanother grant
they believed it was in retribution for what theyd done in that research report.
And what was confirmed was that your office had killed a press
conference and a press release just as Secretary Abraham was
about to speak on the hydrogen cell research in Europe as evidence
that it was the Bush Administrations concern for the environment.
Your spokesman does say pretty much the same thing in this article that you said this morning, that that was so that you could talk
to the Department of Energy. Nobody at NASA, all of them were
speaking without attribution, seemed to buy that at all. They
thought it was political.
So please read this article again and Dr. Marburger, also, please
read the report of about two and a half years ago by the Union of
Concerned Scientists, that were multiple reports of intimidation of
scientists, of scientists having their grants revoked, which is Mr.
Wus tale earlier of the scientists from his district that you said you
hadnt heard about, reports being edited, revised, censored because
their findings were unpalatable, of advisory panels being stacked
with scientists whose views were not necessarily in the mainstream
of the scientific community, but were very compatible with what
the Administration believed. Please read that article again this
morning and that report by the Union of Concerned Scientists.
Chairman BOEHLERT. Thank you, Mr. Miller. Id like to make
this point to Mr. Miller. This committee is vitally concerned with
scientific inquiry. We want to be informed by scientists. We dont
want to intimidate them. And when matters are brought to the attention of the Chair that question the process, that would indicate
that perhaps the process is not working as desired, the Chair is
very active. I would point out that I am most familiar with the
Hansen case, as its now known, around this town. I want to point
out that NASA took immediate action. Mike Griffin, the Administrator of NASA, took immediate action to advise one and all within
that agency that scientific inquiry is not to be stifled, scientific
opinion is not to be stifled. I applauded him for that.
I want to point out that this committee took to task another committee because we thought that other committee, in this instance,
Energy and Commerce, in dealing with Dr. Mann and his associates on the so-called hockey stick theory involving global climate
change, we thought that the Energy and Commerce Committee was
not proceeding in an appropriate manner. Rather than conducting
public hearings, discuss the subject and to question the science,
they launched an investigation to intimidate the scientists and I
made that very public. In this instance, there are a lot of questions

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to be asked and I am convinced that Dr. Marburger, in his capacity, and I am convinced that each of the gentlemen before me in
their capacity, would agree with the basic premise that science
should inform us, we should not engage in trying to intimidate scientists who happen to have an opinion different from the political
orthodoxy of the day.
I like to point out to people that you and I, Mr. Miller, both work
in a town where everyone likes to say theyre for science-based decision making until the scientific consensus leads to a politically inconvenient conclusion, then some people want to go to Plan B. But
I am convinced, after all the effort and energy of my staff and I
in looking into these matters, thats theres no secret plot hatched
on high to intimidate science, but there are some people who get
off the reservation and this 24-year-old rogue assistant in the Public Affairs Department is a case in point, thinking that he was, you
know, aiding the cause and did something that was totally
unappropriate. I would further point out that that young rogue is
no longer on the payroll of the United States Government and that
swift, prompt, decisive, crystal-clear action was taken by the Administrator of NASA. The word went out to the scientific community, as the word should go out from this Chair and from all of you
very distinguished gentlemen that we want to be informed by
science. We dont want to intimidate scientists. Thank you very
much, Mr. Miller.
Mr. MILLER. Mr. Chair, may I point back, since you pointed out
a few things?
Chairman BOEHLERT. Yes, sir, Id be glad to do it, Mr. Miller.
Mr. MILLER. First of all, I readily can say the Democratic Party
is also plagued by 24-year-olds who are remarkably self-important
and get us all into trouble. I do not want to disagree with my
Chairman. He is certainly one of the fairest chairmen here and
does preside over this committee in a very nonpartisan way, certainly a bipartisan way. However, the Democrats on this committee
have tried to make this question a subject of committee hearings.
We did that two and a half years ago when the Union of Concerned
Scientists issued their report and Mr. Chairman, you would not
agree to conduct committee hearings on that point. We now have
the issue of Jim Hansen, one of the worlds preeminent climate scientists who has been told by a 24-year-old to keep quiet. We have
Mr. Wus specific instance in Oregon. Dr. Marburger says hell look
at this on a case-by-case basis, but we have heard from many others that this is not a case-by-case matter, this is something that
crosses all the scientific research agencies. We have the instance in
this mornings paper of five Caltech research scientists who have
not gotten a single grant since they issued an unpalatable report.
Mr. Chairman, will you agree to hold hearings on this topic?
Chairman BOEHLERT. Wait to get an answer from Dr. Marburger
after he has had an opportunity to look into the matter and report
back. Im not reluctant to have hearings on anything. My job is not
to be a cheerleader for the Administration even though its the Administration that I gladly identify with and proudly identify with,
I stand up to the Administration when I dont agree with the Administration and there are occasions when I dont. Secretary
Bodman knows, for example, that on the Energy Policy the Admin-

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istration advanced, I didnt think it handled the challenge in the
correct way and I was a leader of the opposition, trying to make
something better.
But the point is, Id be glad to hold hearings when I think they
are in the jurisdiction of this committee and when they involve
something where there is compelling evidence that indicates that
this committee has to take its time and energy to hold hearings
and right now, were talking about the American Competitiveness
Initiative, were talking about the American Energy Initiative.
Those are vitally important subjects. We have very distinguished
Americans before us that are giving us their time, theyre sharing
with us their wisdom and were learning from that process.
This committees going to have a whole series of Subcommittee
hearings over the ensuing weeks and months to try to bring all of
this to a logical conclusion where we establish responsible public
policy thats responding to the national need in the proper way. So
with that, let me tell you I will be glad to entertain any request
from any Member of the Committee, Republican or Democrat, for
hearings. I want those requests backed up by supporting documentation that the hearings are warranted or justified.
And quite frankly, its my sincere feeling, from the heart, from
the gut, from the head, that this institution, the Congress of the
United States, in which we proudly serve, is far too partisan, far
too partisan. The election is over. Lets get on with identifying,
with shaping responsive public policy in a responsible way. With
that, let me have one last question for Dr. McQueary because
youve been sitting here all this time so patient and I want to give
you an opportunity before you leave to address one question.
The Presidents budget contains strong new supportwait a
minute. I want to make sure I got the right question. All right,
there you go. How are DHSthis is very important because its relevant to you and its also relevant to Commerce. How are DHS and
NIST working together with industry to ensure that high quality
standards are being developed for homeland security related technologies such as biometrics and cyber security and inter-operable
communications and how would the proposed reduction in funding
for standards within DHS S&T affect the future of DHS internal
program, its relationship with NIST and its relationship with the
makers and users of homeland security technologies? Thats a big
question, but its also very important.
Dr. MCQUEARY. Its a very important question. TheI need to
emphasize that the relationship that we have with NIST, in my
judgment, could not be better, starting with when Dr. Bement was
there. We worked out that relationship. We have a NIST person on
detail to Science and Technology that actually heads up the standards work that we do. All of the work that we deal with in standards is a consensus standard approach in which we engage not only
NIST but ANSI and any other standards agency around the country to try to make sure that what we propose to do in either draft
standards or in final standards represent a point of view that those
who would be most affected by it could use.
We also have a NIST person that is working with us in our critical infrastructure protection area. Now, with that said, the issue
on the budget, a part of that reduction, there are two things you

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see in the number; one, is we made a substantial move of monies
into the management and administrative account, which we needed
to do in order to properly account for how our funds are being
spent. That is one issue. The other is the DNDO, or the radiation
standards. That will be paid for out of the DNDO budget. We will
assist them, but fundamentally the budget, for what they have to
do in developing standards there. So the accommodation of those
two things represent the primary change in that number. Im not
concerned that were about to start sliding standards at all with
that, with the budget level we have.
Chairman BOEHLERT. And how about the relationship with
NIST? I mean, do you feel thats solid?
Dr. MCQUEARY. The relationship is excellent. I knew Bill Jeffrey.
It was good there when we were with Dr. Bement. Bill Jeffrey I
knew when he was working for Dr. Marburger, and so we have a
very good relationship with them and look forward to continue it.
Its an excellent organization.
Mr. BOEHLERT. Dr. Sampson, do you want to give us your take
on that?
Dr. SAMPSON. Well, I would concur. We have worked very closely
with Homeland Security on biometric standards. Dr. Jeffrey is a
true leader. He is a excellent scientist. Hes a good manager. Hes
a good colleague with partner agencies, and so we have a very
strong relationship.
Mr. BOEHLERT. We promised to get you gentlemen out before the
sun sets today, but as a famous talk show host used to say, for the
last word, I will recognize Ms. Jackson Lee for a short intervention.
Ms. JACKSON LEE. Thank you, Mr. Chairman, and it is an intervention to you, please. Thank you for your kind remarks regarding
the royalty payments. I do want to say that, hopefully, in a bipartisan manner, we can have hearings. I indicated that Houston still
considers itself the energy capital of the world and I represent it
proudly, but that language and contract were passed during a time
when there was a necessity to encourage development and the energy industry was, of course, experiencing some difficult times. I
hope well have the opportunity to consider it and reconsider it, not
on breaking contract, but on the progressive or forward-thinking of
what we can do to enhance alternative fuels.
Chairman BOEHLERT. Thank you very much and I agree
Ms. JACKSON LEE. And I hope we can have hearings was my
question.
Chairman BOEHLERT. And I thank you very much. I would like
to claim jurisdiction over the whole wide world. Unfortunately, this
committee does not have jurisdiction. Its in the Resources Committee.
Ms. JACKSON LEE. Waive it.
Chairman BOEHLERT. And well go hand in hand to the Resources Committee and then make the case. But thank you very
much. I appreciate all the time youve given us in your very busy
schedules. I know you will be responsive in a timely manner to the
written questions we submit. I also know from personal experience,
and its not just because Im the Chairman, my colleagues reported
the same thing, all of you gentlemen have had dialogue over the
telephone, in person, in office meetings with various Members of

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this committee. I commend you for your great work for the Nation.
And, Dr. Bement, Im glad to see you smiling. This hearing is adjourned.
[Whereupon, at 1:15 p.m., the Committee was adjourned.]

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Appendix:

ANSWERS

TO

POST-HEARING QUESTIONS

(165)

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ANSWERS

TO

POST-HEARING QUESTIONS

Responses by John H. Marburger III, Director, Office of Science and Technology Policy
Questions submitted by Chairman Sherwood L. Boehlert
Q1. What level of funding is proposed in the Fiscal Year 2007 (FY07) budget request
specifically for studying potential environmental and safety implications associated with nanotechnology? Please provide agency-specific budget levels and describe for each agency the research that it plans to focus upon. How is
nanotechnology environmental and safety research coordinated with R&D on potential new nanotechnology products? How is it coordinated with the needs of
regulatory agencies?
A1. In accordance with the 21st Century Nanotechnology Research and Development
Act of 2003 (P.L. 108153), information regarding the spending for environmental,
health, and safety (EHS) research related to nanotechnology will be provided in the
National Nanotechnology Initiative (NNI) Supplement to the Presidents FY 2007
Budget. The Supplement will be delivered to the Committee after it is reviewed and
approved by the 25 NNI agencies. (As called for under P.L. 108153, the supplement
will include a description of the amount of Small Business Innovative Research and
Small Business Technology Transfer Research funds directed at nanotechnology research and development. Collection of these data from all of the NNI agencies has
delayed completion of the report, but publication is imminent.)
Although the Government generally does not perform safety testing or research
on specific products, environment and safety research (whether on nanotechnologyenabled materials or otherwise) is performed on classes of compounds or materials
based on a number of criteria, including the likelihood of exposure and potential for
toxicity (based on preliminary data or similarities with other compounds). Such research falls within the jurisdiction of several agencies, including the National
Science Foundation, the Environmental Protection Agency, the National Institute
for Occupational Safety and Health, and the National Institutes of Healths National
Toxicology Program.
Within the National Science and Technology Councils Nanoscale Science, Engineering, and Technology Subcommittee, the Nanotechnology Environmental and
Health Implications (NEHI) Working Group provides for coordination among the research agencies and those agencies with regulatory responsibilities. A document is
in preparation that identifies the research needed to support risk assessment and
regulatory decision-making.
Q2. In his testimony to the Science Committee on February 15, Dr. Sampson mentioned that in April 2005, the Office of Science and Technology Policy completed
a Strategic Plan for a U.S. Integrated Earth Observing System. How did the
strategic plan guide development of the Administrations FY07 budget request
for activities related to the earth observing technologies? What is the Administrations FY07 request for the activities that are identified as contributing to, or are
a part of, the strategic plan for earth observing systems? Of that amount, how
much is for new initiatives created to support the strategic plan and how much
is for previously existing programs?
A2. The 15-agency U.S. Group on Earth Observations (USGEO), as a Subcommittee
of the National Science and Technology Councils Committee on Environment and
Natural Resources, develops plans and guidance for an Integrated Earth Observing
System (IEOS). The primary goal of IEOS is to fully utilize and optimize our existing (substantial) investments in Earth observing systems through improved
prioritization, integration and coordination. Many of the Earth observation programs throughout the Federal Government are beginning to voluntarily align themselves with the goals and processes of the USGEO.
With the publication of the U.S. Strategic Plan for IEOS in April, 2005, the
USGEO has been focusing on the development of plans to implement the IEOS.
Near-term Opportunity Plans have been developed and will be released in the next
several weeks. These plans address a wide range of societal benefit areas, from reducing loss of life and property from disasters to supporting sustainable agriculture,
to improving public health. The plans will be factored into the agency and OMB for
the FY 2008 planning activities and budget request. The USGEO has also begun
mid- and long-term planning for these and some additional areas.
With the FY 2007 budget request, agencies are beginning to address the priorities
outlined by USGEO and the IEOS Strategic Plan. In addition, many of the Earth

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observation programs throughout the Federal Government are beginning to voluntarily align themselves with the goals and processes of the USGEO.
Some examples of increases (over 2006 estimate) in the Presidents Request in the
areas of the six Near-Term Opportunities include:
An Air Quality Assessment and Forecast System: $2.5M increase at
NOAA.
Improved Observations for Disaster Reduction: $12.36M increase at
NOAA for Tsunami observation and warning programs at NOAA; $2.8M increase at USGS for National Streamflow Information Program; $27.4 million
for EarthScope at NSF.
A Global Land Observation System: $98 million at NASA to procure a
next-generation Landsat instrument to continue the 30-year record of land
imagery. In addition, the $16M increase in Landsat funding at USGS in FY
2006 is also requested for FY 2007. The Administration has directed the
USGEO to develop a long-term plan to meet U.S. operational land observing
needs for decades to come, but there is no immediate budget implication for
FY 2007.
National Integrated Drought Information System: $4M increase at
NOAA.
A Sea Level Observation System: $13.5 million increase at NSF for the
Ocean Observatories Initiative and $56.0 million for the Alaska Region Research Vessel.
An Architecture and Data Management System for the U.S. integrated
system: $6.8M increase for NOAA data centers that provide access to environmental records.
Q3. In the National Windstorm Impact Reduction Act of 2004, the Office of Science
and Technology Policy was directed to submit to Congress by October 25, 2005
an implementation plan for the National Windstorm Impact Reduction Program
(NWIRP) which would include a designation of the lead agency for the program.
Has a lead agency been designated? When will the implementation plan be delivered to Congress? What do the four agencies involved in NWIRP propose to
spend on these programs in FY07?
A3. The National Windstorm Impact Reduction Program implementation plan has
been completed and was delivered to Congress on April 5, 2006. The plan recommends that a coordinated, comprehensive multi-agency, multi-disciplinary group
be established as a working group of the National Science and Technology Councils
Committee on Environment and Natural Resources, Subcommittee on Disaster Reduction. The charter of the working group is to reduce the impact of wind hazards
by facilitating better communication among agencies, effectively allocating collective
resources and operating within a common framework. This working group shall
meet at least quarterly, report to the Subcommittee on Disaster Reduction annually
and work with State, local officials and non-government organizations as appropriate. All federal agencies contributing to the plan shall be members of the working
group and the chair of the working group will rotate between NIST, NSF, NOAA
and FEMA with each agency serving a two-year term as chair. Existing research
and development activities contain components that are relevant to wind research.
However, the lack of common criteria to identify wind hazard reduction programs
in different agencies makes identifying budgets across agencies relevant to wind impossible or meaningless at this time. An early action of the working group will be
to inventory and analyze wind-related research programs to assess current investments in the different aspects of wind hazards and to optimize the portfolio to address the highest priority wind research.
Question submitted by Representative Eddie Bernice Johnson
Q1. Improvement of math and science education is a major longstanding responsibility of NSF. The Presidents proposed competitiveness initiative provides a
funding increase for NSF of nearly eight percent. Unfortunately, this same budget proposal actually cuts NSFs K12 education programs by seven percent.
Dr. Marburger, why is NSF not an important participant in the part of the
Presidents competitiveness initiative that calls for grants to implement researchbased math curricula and interventions, to provide professional development for
in-service teachers so they can effectively teach advanced placement courses in

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science and math, and to attract more qualified individuals to science and math
teaching?
A1. The Department of Education is the focus of the ACI education component because of its close and direct connection to local school districts and State education
agencies. While NSF funds a number of programs that seek to develop better teaching practices and materials, it does not provide funding to disseminate the products
of that work to teachers across the country. It is the Department of Education that
is best able to take projects and materials developed (often by NSF-funded projects),
evaluate those materials for their efficacy, and disseminate them across the country.
NSF programs provide unique tools and capabilities that are complementary to the
education component of ACI, and I can assure you that NSF and the Department
of Education will be working together to ensure that these new programs are coordinated with similar NSF programs.
NSF support for K12 math and science education is still a very important component of our overall efforts, and these programs will also benefit from the Presidents
American Competitiveness Initiative. The FY 2007 Budget proposes an increase in
funding for NSFs Education and Human Resources Division (HER) of $19.53 million, or 2.5 percent, to a total of $816 million. Although the percentage increase for
EHR is smaller than it is for some of the research directorates, it should be recognized that the Research and Related Activities account includes support for K12
activities. Also, because of the scheduled transition of the Math and Science Partnerships program to the Department of Education, as well as the end of a one-year
pilot program for Young Scholars, the overall budget does not accurately depict the
general trend which is to increase funding for the majority of education programs.
EHR is realigning its K12 programs over FY 2006 and FY 2007, resulting in the
consolidation of several programs. During FY06, two EHR divisionsElementary,
Secondary and Informal Education (ESIE) and Research, Evaluation and Communication (REC), will be combined into the Division of Research on Learning in Formal and Informal Settings. This realignment includes the consolidation of a number
of programs in order to meet current needs in education research, development and
evaluation. In addition, during FY06, three programsResearch on Learning and
Education (ROLE), Evaluative Research and Evaluation Capacity (EREC), and
Interagency Education Research Initiative (IERI)will be combined into the Research and Evaluation on Education in Science and Engineering (REESE) program.
The consolidation effort will continue in FY07 with the three additional programs
Instructional Materials Development (IMD), Teacher Professional Continuum (TPC),
and Centers for Learning and Teaching (CTL)being merged into the new Discovery Research K12 program. The Math and Science Partnerships program has
also been moved to the Division for Undergraduate Education.
Within the new Division of Research on Learning in Formal and Informal Settings, funding for Discovery Research K12 and for Informal Science education is
increased by $10.71 million or 11.5 percent, and $2.94 million or 4.7 percent, respectively. Funding for long-term, high-risk education research within REESE program
goes down by $6.87 million due to the phase out of IERI. The Discovery Research
K12 program grows to move research results into the classroom on a shorter-term.
To fully appreciate the level of funding that NSF directs toward improving K12
education, one must look beyond the Division of Research on Learning in Formal
and Informal Settings, the new division that is the primary center for K12-focused
activities. Numerous programs in other divisions within EHR also provide funding
to improve K12 education. For example, while the Advanced Technological Education (ATE) program is funded through the Division of Undergraduate Education
primarily to improve two- and four-year programs in technological education, many
projects and centers funded through this program have strong links to high school
students who frequently begin college level work while still in secondary school. The
ATE budget increases in FY07 by $990,000 to $45.92 million. Similarly, the Robert
Noyce Scholarship Program, a program aimed at helping individuals with degrees
in STEM fields to transition to careers in K12 teaching, enjoys a budget increase
of over 11 percent in FY07. Funding for the National STEM Digital Library, an online resource for educators and students, also increases by $500,000 in FY07.
Within the Division of Graduate Education, the budget for the Graduate Teaching
Fellows in K12 Education program, a program that puts STEM graduate students
into K12 schools where they improve communication and teaching, increases by 8.7
percent to $46.8 million.
Beyond the EHR directorate, there are a number of programs in the Research and
Related Activities Account that devote significant resources to the goal of improving
K12 education. For example, the new Middle and High School Geosciences Program, administered by the Geosciences Directorate, will provide $3 million to im-

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prove geosciences education in grades 612. Additionally, the Geosciences Directorate will expand support for the network of Centers for Ocean Science Education.
Within the Integrative Activities Directorate, funding for the Science of Learning
Centers increases by $4.29 million to $27.0 million. And within the Engineering Directorate, funding for the Research Experiences for Teachers increases by $100,000
to $4.10 million and for GK12 fellowship support increases by $180,000 to $3.37
million. Beyond that, Engineering Research Centers are required to include K12
education and outreach activities in their work plan. And much of the work funded
by the Social, Behavioral and Economics Directorate is targeted advancing our understanding of education and workforce development.
Additionally, NSF is an important member of the American Competitiveness
Council. Created by Congress in the Deficit Reduction Act, this Council aims to look
across the Federal Government at all the money spent in STEM education programs
and align our efforts around shared, strategic goals. The various types of education
programs housed at NSF will provide valuable insight into the process as we look
to evaluate how well all federal math and science programs are working and work
to improve coordination between them.

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ANSWERS

TO

POST-HEARING QUESTIONS

Responses by Samuel W. Bodman, Secretary, Department of Energy


Questions submitted by Chairman Sherwood L. Boehlert
Advanced Fuel Cycle Facility
Q1. The Fiscal Year 2007 (FY07) budget request contains dedicated funding for a
detailed systems analysis of the advanced nuclear fuel cycle. When will the systems analysis be completed? Will that be early enough to affect the decision on
whether and how to move ahead with new facilities, including the Advanced
Fuel Cycle Facility, the demonstration reprocessing facility, and the demonstration sodium-cooled fast reactor?
A1. The Advanced Fuel Cycle Initiative (AFCI) has been conducting systems analysis for several years and that work, which is an evolutionary process, has been key
to the development of the new Global Nuclear Energy Partnership (GNEP) initiative
and the associated proposed demonstration facilities. While systems analysis will
continue to refine the overall programmatic goals, it does not replace the need for
the development of conceptual designs of facilities. We anticipate that the next steps
that will determine whether and how to move ahead with new facilities include development of conceptual designs of the various facilities and their associated cost
and schedule. We believe that this process, and additional systems analysis, will be
completed by mid-2008.
Q2. The FY07 budget request proposes to undertake at least three new major demonstration facilitiesthe sodium-cooled fast reactor, the gas-cooled reactor, and
the demonstration reprocessing facilityin addition to the research-oriented Advanced Fuel Cycle Facility. Each of these projects will involve substantial outyear financial commitments. What is the total cost of each of these items, and
the projected spending profile? What other programs are you expecting to cut to
fit these facilities into the budget, or will they require new money?
A2. Early, pre-conceptual estimates of the cost to bring these three integrated recycle demonstration facilities to the point of initial operation range from $4 billion to
$9 billion. The Department will develop a baseline cost and schedule for the proposed GNEP technology demonstration facilities over the next two years in conjunction with completion of conceptual design studies. The Department has requested
$250 million in FY 2007 to accelerate the planning and research needed to proceed
with the demonstration effort. While we anticipate making additional investments
in fiscal years 2008 and 2009, the efforts over the next two years are critical to refining these cost estimates. The Department has made no decisions about outyear
funding for these projects. As noted in the Departments Five Year Plan for FY
2007FY 2011 (March 2006), the Administration determines the details of its appropriations request one year at a time. Each year, the Administration works to develop the detailed estimates for the budget year for individual programs. The FY
2008 and subsequent years requests will be made in the future.
University Reactor Infrastructure and Education Program
Q3. The explanation given in the FY07 budget submission for the cancellation of the
University Reactor Infrastructure and Education program is that the programs
goals have been met in terms of the numbers of students enrolled in nuclear
science and engineering disciplines. What are the consequences of a $23 million
dollar drop in Department of Energy (DOE) funding to current students and faculty in these disciplines? What specific plans does DOE have to help attract top
students and faculty into nuclear disciplines?
A3. Over the last decade, university nuclear engineering schools leveraged funding
provided by DOE and industry partners to strengthen the nuclear engineering education infrastructure and attract students to careers in nuclear engineering. With
enrollments at their highest levels in over a decade and four new university nuclear
engineering programs launched over the last five years, the Department believes
that the objectives of the governments support to nuclear engineering programs
have been achieved and funding has not been requested in FY 2007.
That said, the Department will continue to fund university participation in the
Departments nuclear energy research programs, through the Generation IV nuclear
energy systems initiative, the Nuclear Hydrogen Initiative, and the Advanced Fuel
Cycle Initiative. Under the Nuclear Energy Research Initiative, the Department

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awarded 24 new research grants to universities in FY 2006, totaling $12 million
over the next three years. With the funding requested for nuclear energy research
in FY 2007, the Department would continue to fund ongoing research grants as well
as award $4 million in new research. Additionally, as part of the Advanced Fuel
Cycle Initiative, the Department will continue efforts to attract students to the field
of transmutation and spent fuel recycling. The Department will continue to engage
faculty and students in AFCI research and development through NERI, through the
University of Nevada-Las Vegas, the University of Nevada-Reno, the Idaho State
University Accelerator Center, and through the AFCI Fellowship Program. Over the
last four years, the Department has sponsored AFCI fellowships for 25 students
seeking post-graduate degrees in study related to advanced fuel cycles, including
fuels, recycling and transmutation engineering. The Generation IV program is also
planning to start a university fellowship program in FY 2006 for post-graduate
study related to advanced reactor systems.
Q4. While the FY07 budget request purposes to increase funding significantly for
solar, wind, biofuels, and hydrogen, it also proposes to decrease funding for energy efficiency technology development and deployment by more than eight percent. What is the rationale for these proposed cuts? What role do you see energy
efficiency playing in meeting the Presidents goal of reducing the U.S. addiction to oil? What role do you see for DOE in advancing the role of energy efficiency?
A4. Reducing Americas growing dependence on foreign oil and changing how we
power our homes and businesses are among the Departments highest priorities, as
outlined in the Presidents Advanced Energy Initiative. The FY 2007 Budget directs
resources to those programs with the greatest potential to contribute to that goal.
The FY 2007 DOE budget requests $2.1 billion for program included in the Advanced Energy Initiative, an increase of $381 million over FY 2006. Funding will
help develop clean, affordable sources of energy that will help reduce the use of fossil fuels and lead to changes in the way we power our homes, businesses and cars.
Efficiency improvements pursued by the Vehicle Technologies program can significantly reduce the Nations growing demand for oil.
The Advanced Energy Initiative includes a broad mix of oil displacement and
clean energy R&D initiatives, including nuclear (up 56 percent to $392M), solar (up
78 percent to $148M), and biomass (up 65 percent to $150M). Specific goals include
reducing the cost of cellulosic ethanol to $1.07/gallon by 2012, and reducing the cost
of solar PV to less than 10 cents/kilowatt hour by 2015.
Q5. Your testimony notes that the Climate Change Technology Program was authorized in the Energy Policy Act of 2005. This program has been operating primarily with personnel temporarily assigned from other programs. Do you expect
to have a full time staff for this effort or will the program continue to be staffed
as it has been with temporary assignments?
A5. The Department does have dedicated staff for CCTP within the Office of Policy
and International Affairs (PI). Because of the nature of the CCTP work (interagency
coordination, advice, strategic planning), we expect DOE program staff and staff
from other agencies will continue to dedicate some time to CCTP as part of their
regular responsibilities. The Fiscal Year 2006 Energy and Water Development Appropriation reduced funding for the Departmental Administration account, of which
a portion (PI) supports CCTP. The FY 2007 Budget requests $1 million within PI
to support CCTP.
ITER
Q6. There is a perception in the fusion research community that funding for ITER
will reduce funding for the domestic research program, yet there is a $19.5 million increase in enabling research and development (R&D) for ITER. According
to DOE budget documents, these research activities are directly associated with
the ongoing base program. It sounds like these activities involve the research
and design, by the domestic fusion program, of the high tech components of
ITER. Will these increased funds for enabling R&D for ITER be spent in the
United States by scientists and technologists in our existing fusion laboratories
and university programs?
A6. The $19.5 million increase in enabling research and development for ITER is,
in large measure, for activities to be carried out within the domestic fusion program
by scientists and engineers in our existing fusion laboratories and universities.
About $11.6 million of the increase will be for R&D by these scientists and engineers in support of the components to be provided by the U.S. to the ITER site. The

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remaining $7.9 million will be spent in industry for manufacturing R&D and process
demonstration at a production scale in order to show that the components can be
manufactured accurately and efficiently.
Participation of the National Institute of Standards and Technology at the
National Synchrotron Light Source
Q7. The FY07 budget request includes plans to enhance the National Institute of
Standards and Technology (NIST) presence at the National Synchrotron Light
Source (NSLS) at Brookhaven National Laboratory. DOE is planning to build
NSLSII, ultimately as a replacement for the current Brookhaven light source.
How will DOE coordinate NISTs new investments at the existing NSLS with
Brookhavens plans for a newer facility? How will DOE coordinate its instrumentation plans for its entire suite of light sources with NISTs light source investments?
A7. In the near-term, NISTs FY 2007 investment at NSLS will build on current
capabilities there by providing an expanded set of scientific instruments and attracting additional top scientific talent. Because the NSLSII project will not be operational until FY 2013 at the earliest, enhancing the NIST instrument suite will enable these instruments to remain at the forefront during the years of design and
construction of NSLSII. New instruments developed for NSLS will be designed
with the possibility of transfer to NSLSII when that new facility becomes operational.
The method of development of the entire suite of instruments at the new NSLS
II facility will be similar to the model developed for the Spallation Neutron Source
(SNS). That is, a majority of the beamlines will be built. and operated by the facility
itself acting in collaboration with user groups that are strongly involved with all aspects of instrument scientific justification, development of technical specifications,
and production of instrument conceptual designs. Other beamlines will be built and
operated by external entities such as NIST. Advisory Committees for NSLSII are
now being established to provide advice and guidance on all aspects of the NSLS
II project, including the development of an optimized instrument suite and a standardized user access policy. Because NIST is a leading user of the NSLS, researchers
from this institution will be actively involved with these Advisory Committees.
Questions submitted by Representative Bart Gordon
New Domestic Fusion Facilities
Q1. Secretary Bodman, my understanding is that in addition to their participation
in the ITER Project, China, Japan, South Korea and India are all constructing
major new domestic facilities. When is the last time that the U.S. constructed
a major new domestic facility? Do you envision a time in the foreseeable future
that the U.S. might build a major new facility at home? If so, what would be
the purpose of that facility?
A1. We are currently building the National Compact Stellarator Experiment
(NCSX) at Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory, with operations scheduled to begin
in FY 2009. Similar to a tokamak, and therefore able to make use of the results
from ITER, the compact stellarator concept offers the possibility of a fusion power
plant that is more attractive than one based on the simple tokamak. In addition,
the National Ignition Facility (NIF) at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory,
funded by the DOEs National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA), is scheduled to begin fusion ignition experiments in 2010, with a primary mission of ensuring that the Nations nuclear stockpile remains safe, secure, and reliable.
With regard to building another major new facility at home and its purpose, Dr.
Orbach, the Director of the DOE Office of Science, has recently issued a charge to
the Fusion Energy Sciences Advisory Committee (FESAC) requesting a 10-year plan
for how the Office of Fusion Energy Sciences program should evolve over the coming
decade to take into account new and upgraded international experiments, and how
the program should prepare to make the transition to ITER. FESAC will be examining the productive lifetime of existing facilities and whether reconfigurations, replacements with new facilities, or additional participation in foreign facilities would
be more appropriate to fill important gaps in fusion research in the years to come.
This report is due by the end of February, 2007.

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Effect of Domestic Fusion Cuts on Workforce
Q2. Secretary Bodman, I am pleased to see that your budget request for fusion energy sciences maintains the U.S. Commitment to the ITER project and provides
some additional funding for the major fusion user facilities. However, I am concerned that several of the smaller elements of the fusion program suffer significant cuts, including fusion materials research, small innovative experiments,
high energy density physics, and fusion theory. Given concerns that have been
voiced about the aging fusion research community, and the need to maintain
U.S. expertise in these fields to maximize our return from international partnerships, does it make sense to cut these programs?
A2. With this budget, we strove to maintain a balanced domestic program while reorienting it to support ITER to the maximum extent possible. With regard to the
programs that have been reduced or redirected, we believe some of the reductions
will be alleviated by other programs. For example, some materials research will be
conducted as part of our contribution to ITER, and the increased budget for the
SciDAC (Scientific Discovery through Advanced Computing) program will offset reductions in the fusion theory program. Active research in High Energy Density
Physics (HEDP) is also being conducted by DOEs National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA), helping to limit the programmatic impact of the reductions within
the Office of Science-funded piece of DOEs HEDP program.
Q3. The President signed EPACT 2005 just six months ago. This budget requests
falls short of EPACT 2005 by 23 percent in Energy R&D, with many programs
less than half of what is authorized. In light of the need for this R&D, why did
the Department not seek funding for these programs despite widespread Congressional and Presidential support?
A3. The Energy Policy Act contains authorizations for a variety of initiatives and
programs. As the Administration noted in a July 15, 2005, letter to the conference
committee on H.R. 6, The House and Senate versions of H.R. 6 also include authorization levels that in many cases significantly exceed the Presidents Budget. These
authorizations set unrealistic targets and expectations for future program-funding
decisions. The Presidents Fiscal Year 2007 Budget proposal reflects the Administrations programmatic and fiscal priorities. Those priorities took into account the
spending opportunities presented by the Energy Policy Act.
Q4. Last fall the President and you announced a major energy efficiency initiative,
and just a month ago the White House signed an interagency MOU calling for
energy efficiency measures throughout the Federal Government. Then we get a
budget that slashes that the exact programs that will accomplish this. Please tell
the Committee how we are supposed to take seriously the Administrations commitment to energy efficiency when you give us a request that makes a mockery
of it?
A4. Facing greater uncertainty over the price of petroleum, as well as tightening
federal budgets, the Department made very difficult choices in developing its FY
2007 budget request. We concluded that reducing Americas growing dependence on
foreign oil is the highest priority for the Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable
Energy in FY 2007 and have directed our resources to those programs with the
greatest potential to contribute to that goal.
The Departments FY 2007 budget request maintains robust funding levels in a
variety of energy efficiency programs. Funding for energy efficient vehicle technologies, exclusive of earmarks, is up $4.2 million compared to the FY 2006 appropriation. Funding for the Building Technologies program is up $8.1 million, with significant increases for the Solid-State Lighting Initiative and appliance standards
and equipment standards and analysis. While funding for FEMP is down slightly
compared to FY 2006 appropriations, that decrease reflects the contribution of new
efficiencies within the program that will allow the Department to achieve the same
or even better results with less money.
Q5. Why do cuts to the Federal Energy Management Program (FEMP) continue
when you and the President personally called for more efficiency in the government?
A5. The Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy budget request for the Federal
Energy Management Program shows a decrease of $2.1 million in FY 2007 due to
streamlining the Programs management, training and communications efforts. We
expect to be able to achieve the same, or better, results.

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Q6. The Industries of the Future program at DOE has a long history of supporting
R&D that improves energy efficiency in some of our most valued core domestic
industries, the same industries that are rapidly heading overseas. Yet, this administration continues to decrease support of this program at a time when it is
most needed. Please explain how 30 percent decrease in funding will affect our
core domestic industrial sections.
A6. While industry remains a major energy end-use sector of the Nations economy,
significant gains in energy efficiency have already been achieved (output since the
1970s has more than doubled for essentially the same energy consumption). Since
significant economic incentives exist for industry to continue on its own to invest
in new, more efficient technologies, the Department is shifting some of its limited
resources toward higher-priority R&D areas, such as reducing our national dependence on foreign oil. At the same time, we are refocusing our activities in the Industrial Program to promote more effectively energy savings in the industrial sector.
Q7. Please be prepared to discuss at the hearing the status and implementation of
the following sections of the Energy Policy Act of 2005 and submit a report detailing the status of implementation of all other sections of Title IX of the Act:
Section 912Next Generation Lighting Initiative
Q7a. Did DOE seek funding for this program in its request to OMB? If not, why not?
What is the status of discussions with the National Academy of Sciences to conduct the periodic review of the program required under section 912(i)?
A7a. DOEs 2007 budget requests increased funding for Solid-State Lighting.

The amounts shown in the table above are the Solid-State Lighting (SSL) portion
of the lighting R&D sub-program in FY 2005 and FY 2006. The non-SSL portion
of the program was about $2 million for each FY. In the FY 2007 request, the total
funding for lighting R&D is for SSL.
We have not begun discussions with NAS for a period review since we have just
completed an extensive peer review with strong industry participation.
Section 914Building Standards
Q7b. The need for sustainable buildings that are energy efficient has been made
abundantly clear over the last year both by the damage from Hurricane
Katrina and the record energy bills we are all experiencing even though this
has been a very mild winter. Did DOE seek funding for this program in its
request to OMB? If not, why not? Section 914(b) requires the DOE to enter into
an agreement with the National Institute of Building Sciences to conduct certain assessments and other activities for the program within a 120 days after
date of enactment. Has DOE entered into an agreement with National Institute
of Building Sciences to begin this work? If not, why not?
A7b. The Department has requested a significant level of funding to provide needed
research, development, validation, and market introduction of energy-efficient building technologies. The request for commercial building integration, including research and development, analysis, modeling, and best practices development, is
$4,699,000. However, no funding for Section 914 was included in the 2006 Energy
and Water Development Appropriations Act, and the Department has not requested
funding for Section 914 in FY 2007. DOE continues to work with the National Institute of Building Sciences and other stakeholder organizations to promote energy-efficient building technologies, but has not entered into a financial agreement with
the Institute because the activities described in Section 914 will not contribute to
the program goals of achieving 3050 percent energy efficiency improvement in commercial buildings.

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Section 917Advanced Energy Technology Centers
Q7c. Did DOE seek funding for this program in its request to OMB? If not, why not?
What progress has DOE made in organizing the Committee required under section 917 to advise DOE on the establishment of the centers?
A7c. The Departments 2007 budget does not include funding for this program. Section 917(a) instructs DOE to make grants available to State and local governments,
or universities, to establish a geographically dispersed network of Advanced Energy
Efficiency Technology Transfer Centers. The centers are to focus on needs for increased energy efficiency for manufactured and site-built housing, encourage demonstration and commercial application of advanced energy efficient technologies, including distributed generation technologies. Section 917(f) instructs DOE to establish an advisory committee to advise the Secretary on the establishment of the centers. The section provides authorizations for such sums as may be appropriated.
The Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy (EERE) provides grants
support to States, communities, and other partners, to achieve the goals of Section
917. Specifically, the EERE Building Technologies Program provides grants to support the adoption of energy efficient technologies in new and existing homes, use
of ENERGY STAR appliances, and expanded energy efficient efforts in schools and
commercial buildings. Furthermore, the Office of Electricity Delivery and Energy
Reliability operates eight (8) regional centers for the express purpose of encouraging
the adoption of distributed generation technologies. These Combined Heat and
Power (CHP) Regional Application Centers (RACs) have been established in selected
parts of the country to facilitate deployment of CHP technologies. CHP is one of the
most energy efficient distributed generation technologies with numerous commercial
applications. The centers operate by educating regional players on benefits of CHP
technologies, providing project-specific support; providing feedback to DOE and industry regarding future R&D program needs; and interacting with states to encourage a favorable policy environment for CHP.
Section 983Science Education and Pilot Program
Q7d. What progress has DOE made in awarding the grant required under the Act
to a university consortium? If the grant has not been awarded, what is the current timetable for such an award? If there are no plans for such an award,
what are the DOEs reasons for not making the grant?
A7d. The Energy Policy Act authorizes appropriations for Section 983 for FY 2007,
2008 and 2009 under the Energy Enhancement Fund. Office of Science staff have
met with representatives of the university consortia regarding their initial proposals
and have begun investigating how we would work towards ensuring a productive
end. There is no funding in the 2007 budget for this pilot program. The DOE has
not yet formulated a response to the 0.3 percent budget assessment called for under
the Energy Enhancement Fund.
This issue has been somewhat overtaken by events including the Presidents
American Competitiveness Initiative, which could have a significant effect on the
DOE education and workforce development plans. DOE staff has met with their
counterparts in the Department of Education and plan to work together in their efforts in teacher professional development.
Q8. The President in his State of the Union address showed a change of direction
from heavy reliance on oil and gas to broadening the energy supply base and
he called for replacing 75 percent of Middle East energy imports by 2025. How
difficult a goal is this to achieve?
A8. Diversification of our energy supply has always been a priority of this Administration. Since 2001, the Administration has spent nearly $10 billion to develop
cleaner, cheaper and more reliable energy sources. This is not a change in policy,
but the acceleration of a priority. In order to achieve this goal, we must fundamentally transform how we produce and consume energy.
The Presidents Advanced Energy Initiative proposes aggressive research in technologies that hold the greatest potential in helping America achieve this goal, primarily by changing how we power our transportation sector. The achievement of
this goal is dependent on the successful commercialization of these technologies. For
example, the commercialization of cellulosic ethanol and improved batteries for hybrid and plug-in hybrid vehicles can fundamentally change the way we fuel our
transportation sector. The development and market penetration of hydrogen-powered fuel cell vehicles will also contribute.

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Q9. The Administration, through its first five years, has stated that we do not know
if global warming is the threat that most of the other nations of the world believe it to be. We have been spending money over the past five years on global
warming research. Has this research brought us any closer to deciding one way
or other what our policy should be? Do we have adequate contingency plans if
it turns out by 2025 that we have to reduce our use of fossil fuels?
A9. The President has regularly stated his view that global climate change is a serious problem that must be addressed with a global, long-term approach that is consistent with the long-term goal of stabilizing greenhouse gas concentrations in the
atmosphere.
The Bush Administrations policy on climate change is designed to harness the
power of markets and innovation to enable rapid development and deployment of
cleaner, more efficient energy technologies. We recognize that climate change is a
long-term issue that cannot be addressed in isolation from other needs, such energy
security and pollution abatement. Growing economies are in the best position to finance investment in advanced, clean energy technologies. Major elements of the Administrations approach include near-term policies and measures to slow the growth
in greenhouse gas emissions, investing in climate change science and technology,
and international collaboration.
By 2025, many low- or zero-emissions technologiessuch as carbon sequestration,
hydrogen, advanced nuclear, and biofuelscould be available for widespread deployment, while otherssuch as fusionmay be still be further away. Through our
technology research programs, the U.S. will be poised to capitalize on technical
breakthroughs that can achieve real emission reductions at reasonable cost.
Nuclear Energy Outlook
Q10. How do you believe nuclear energy will be a factor by 2025 in reducing dependence on imported oil? There has been a flurry of interest in recent months in
licensing sites for new reactors. Do we have the licensing policies in place to
have significant numbers of new reactors on line by that date? Will we have
the workforce to run the reactors? Does the sale of Westinghouse and decline
of U.S. nuclear plant component manufacturers affect this capability?
A10. Nuclear energy is used to generate electricity and it is generally not considered a substitute for oil which is primarily used for transportation purposes. Nonetheless, there are two avenues through which nuclear energy could potentially help
to reduce U.S. dependence on imported oil. To the extent that nuclear energy replaces natural gas in electricity production, more natural gas would be available
which may be used to replace oil in some transportation, home heating and industrial processing applications. The other possible alternative for using nuclear energy
to reduce oil imports is to generate large quantities of hydrogen using advanced nuclear reactor technologies. The Department recognizes the potential of this approach
and has pursued such research and development (R&D) under our Nuclear Hydrogen Initiative and Generation IV program. While further R&D is required, our efforts in these areas are expected to help to offset oil imports.
Licensing policies are currently in place to bring a significant number of new nuclear power plants on line by 2025. In the early 1990s, the Nuclear Regulatory
Commission (NRC) put new rules in place to allow efficient licensing of new nuclear
power plants. These rules were specifically designed to streamline the licensing
process and permit resolution of all public health and safety issues associated with
siting, construction, and operation of a new nuclear power plant before a power generation company makes a significant financial investment and begins construction
of the plant. Under these rules, reactor designers are successfully working to obtain
NRC certification of their advanced reactor designs, which will allow deployment of
a large number of new nuclear plants through development of standardized power
plant designs. The Department is working with industry through our Nuclear Power
2010 program to demonstrate the untested licensing processes and develop standardized advanced light water reactor plants. It is anticipated that the new licensing
processes will be fully vetted and any associated policy issues fully resolved around
2015 when the first new nuclear power plant comes on line.
The United States will have the workforce to run its reactors. Over the past few
years, there has been a resurgence of enrollments in college nuclear programs, as
well as an increase in the number of universities offering nuclear engineering and
technology courses. The continuation of this trend is expected to result in a sufficient workforce needed to run future reactors. The nuclear industry will also continue to invest in nuclear programs, thus ensuring the adequacy of the future workforce.

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Nuclear energy is a global industry. The sale of Westinghouse to Toshiba should
not affect the plans for deployment of new nuclear power plants in the U.S. U.S.
manufacturers and fabricators are currently providing equipment and prefabricated
modules for the nuclear plants under construction in Asia. Recent studies showed
that the necessary manufacturing, fabrication, labor, and construction equipment infrastructure is available today or can be easily developed to support the construction
and commissioning of new nuclear power plants expected in the coming years. The
U.S. has substantial capabilities for producing mechanical equipment modules, piping modules, piping spools, structural and electrical modules. Although there is only
one supplier for forgings used for reactor pressure vessels (Japan Steel Works, Ltd.),
U.S. and international manufacturers have the capacity to produce steam turbine
generators, condensers, pumps, valves and other components necessary to build nuclear power plants.
Q11. What do you expect to be the state of U.S. oil and gas reserves in 2025 in areas
that are not environmentally sensitive?
A11. As of 2004, proved reserves of crude oil and natural gas in the United States,
all of which are located in areas where production is possible including some areas
that are environmentally sensitive, are estimated at 21.4 billion barrels and 192.5
trillion cubic feet, respectively. The United States Geological Survey (USGS) and
Minerals Management Service estimate that total recoverable resources for oil and
gas, which include resources in areas currently under moratoria or otherwise restricted areas, are 174.8 billion barrels and 1430.6 trillion cubic feet, respectively.
There is no standard interpretation of the term environmentally sensitive nor are
there any consistently developed estimates of the oil and gas resources that might
be covered by it.
As of January 1, 2003, the regional distribution of the technically recoverable resources under federal moratoria (including Presidential withdrawal) is:

In most recent years, additions to proved reserves have been roughly equivalent
to U.S. production of oil and gas, so the overall level of proved reserves has been
relatively stable. The Energy Information Administrations Annual Energy Outlook
2006 Reference Case projections for lower-48 end-of-year proved reserves in 2025 in
non-moratoria areas is 226.9 trillion cubic feet of natural gas and 18.7 billion barrels of crude oil.
Q12. If we become highly dependent on Biomass, how do we avoid depleting the soil
on which these fuels are being grown?
A12. As with all agricultural crops, biomass crops will need to be produced
sustainably; and USDA is helping to support these efforts through the promotion
of practices such as no-till cultivation (which inherently protects the soil). In some
cases biomass crops have advantages over row crops such as corn and soybeans, because they have perennial roots that further protect the soil. Switchgrass, mentioned by President Bush in the State of the Union, is a perennial grass with a deep
root structure that has been planted on Conservation Reserve Program lands as a
means to thwart soil erosion, thus avoiding the depletion of soils.
FutureGen Project
Q13. Is the Administration completely committed to the FutureGen Coal program?
When do you expect the first plant to be on line and, assuming these technologies can be developed and integrated into a working power plant in the
time contemplated, what will be the state of readiness of these types of plants
to contribute to electric energy supply in 2025?

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A13. FutureGen is a key component of the Presidents commitment to research and


development of clean coal technologies. Our FY 2007 budget request funds
FutureGen at $54 million, in accord with the planned funding profile in FutureGen
report to Congress, and includes an advance appropriation of $203 million for FY
2008.
We anticipate that the FutureGen plant will begin operations in FY 2012 and continue operations for four years into FY 2016, followed by a monitoring period of two
to three years. Assuming the plant achieves its performance goals of technical feasibility and economic viability, we expect the industry will have the technology and
data to design and build the first commercial versions of near-zero atmospheric
emission coal plants based on the FutureGen concept within 10 years of FutureGen
start up. This would provide the engineering basis to enable FutureGen type plant
deployment in the energy market place by 20252030 time frame.
Q14. Buildings consume an estimated 20 percent of domestic energy supply. Reducing energy consumption in existing buildings seems like a fertile area to find
energy savings, particularly in existing buildings stock. Why arent we hearing
more about conservation and sustainability with these potential energy savings
in sight?
A14. The Department of Energy has several activities aimed at reducing energy
consumption in the existing buildings stock, including:
The appliance standards program, which is focused on increasing the efficiency of many residential energy-using products sold to existing homeowners;
A variety of consumer tools and informational brochures, such as the Energy
Savers Guide, fact sheets based on DOE building-science research, and the
Home Energy Saver Web Tool;
The Energy Star program (administered jointly with EPA), which identifies
for consumers those products in the market place that are most energy efficient;
Home Performance with Energy Star, a joint program with the EPA and
HUD that offers a comprehensive, whole-house approach to making energyefficiency improvements to the more than 80 million existing homes; and
Numerous efforts to encourage incorporation of energy-efficiency technologies
and practices in the Gulf Coast rebuilding effort.
In addition, the Energy Policy Act of 2005 offers consumers and businesses federal
tax credits beginning in January 2006 for energy-efficient appliances and products.
Most of these tax credits remain in effect through 2007.
Q15. In light of the Presidents increased interest in science education in the State
of the Union Address, will the administration use the requirement to spend 0.3
percent of its energy research and development budget on science education to
get a jump start on these programs in FY06, including the SEEPP project in
Section 914?
A15. The Office of Science has reviewed the DOE investments in the areas spelled
out in the relevant section of the bill, but has not yet formalized a response. The
recently introduced PACE-Energy Act has influenced the nature of our internal deliberations since, if it were enacted as currently written, it would have a significant
impact on our workforce and education development plans. DOE staff has met with
SEEPP representatives to explore how they might work towards the common goals
of the SEEPP and the DOE.
Q16a. The President has spoken about the need for the U.S. to become more competitive in the world through innovation and research and development. He emphasized the particular importance of the physical sciences in his State of the
Union message. Since our economic competitiveness is expressed ultimately
through the efforts of industry (as opposed to national labs or universities),

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what is the Department doing to ensure that U.S. industry is included in and
benefits from the research done at the labs and universities?
A16a. The DOEs Office of Science (SC) has a number of direct and indirect ways
of transferring the technology derived from DOE research or DOE-funded university
research, to industry. The direct route is for industry to use, or to partner with universities and other research institution to use, DOE SC facilities at the national
labs. Industry has used our light sources and high-end computation facilities, for example, to perform both proprietary and non-proprietary research. The indirect path
is carried out either through technology transfer programs, which are largely run
by the labs, or through the publication of non-proprietary research results in journals.
DOE is always looking for ways to improve the transfer of technologies from the
lab floor to the factory floor, and there is room for improvement. The timely dissemination of useful technologies is a cornerstone of the Presidents American Competitiveness Initiative.
Nuclear Energy Outlook
Q16b. Please give us specific examples as to how the Offices of Nuclear Energy, Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy and Fossil Energy and/or their labs
are partnering with industry to ensure that their efforts have an economic impact? In dealing with industry, does the Department make any distinction between U.S.-owned companies and those with foreign ownership? Does DOE
need additional authority to facilitate government-industry partnerships? If
so, what are DOEs recommendations?
A16b. Several companies are actively engaged in research and development efforts
under the Generation IV Nuclear Initiative and the Nuclear Hydrogen Initiative. In
addition to the short-term economic impact observed via research personnel salaries
and equipment procurements, long-term economic impact will also be realized
through continued industrial partnering to develop commercial products or processes which industry endorses as being needed. From a broader nuclear power industry perspective, through cost-shared demonstration projects under the Nuclear
Power 2010 Program, the Department is working to reduce the regulatory and financial uncertainty and achieve the near-term deployment of new nuclear power
plants. Also, the Department is developing a standby support program intended to
protect sponsors of the first new nuclear power plants against the financial impact
of certain delays during construction or in gaining approval for operation that are
beyond the sponsors control.
Regarding the Departments Nuclear Power 2010 program, no distinction was
made between U.S.-owned companies and those with foreign ownership in the
awards made to Dominion and NuStart to develop and submit to the Nuclear Regulatory Commission combined construction and operating license applications for new
nuclear power plants within the United States. However, through administrative reviews of the proposals, the Department determined that all of the U.S. Government
cost share under the Cooperative Agreements would be spent within the United
States.
The Department has sufficient authority within the Code of Federal Regulations,
Part 600, Financial Assistance Rules, to enter into government-industry partnerships. A cooperative agreement is the typical method used by the Office of Nuclear
Energy, Science and Technology on joint, cost-shared projects with industry.
Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy
The Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy (EERE) is conducting a
number of activities in partnership with industry. One important example is
EEREs hydrogen technology activities, which, in conjunction with private sector research and development, reduced the cost of automotive fuel cell high-volume systems from $200/kW in 2004 to $125/kW in 2005, and is on target to achieving its
$45/kW goal in 2010. Similarly, EEREs Office of FreedomCAR and Vehicle Technologies has partnered with the automotive and material industries to develop magnesium casting technology that provides a 30 percent weight savings relative to the
aluminum components it replaces; the technology has been adopted by General Motors for its 2006 model year.
EERE follows applicable laws and Departmental guidelines when establishing
partnerships with industry.
EERE does not need any additional authority to facilitate government-industry
partnerships.

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Fossil Energy
In 2001, President Bush challenged the Federal Government to make itself more
results-oriented, and more accountable to the citizens who pay taxes and benefit
from the programs and services government provides.
The Office of Fossil Energys ultimate success comes when the advanced technologies emerging from our research activities are commercialized by the private
sector. Presented here is solid evidence that the taxpayers investment has paid real
and measurable dividends. These are just a few examples of the technological innovations introduced through the Office of Fossil Energy R&D Program that now provide consumers cost-effective, clean, fossil fuel-based energy.
NETL Licenses Mercury Removal Method
FEs National Energy Technology Laboratory has issued an exclusive license to
Powerspan Corporation for a patented method to remove mercury from flue gas
streams using irradiation with ultraviolet light. The potential market for the licensed invention is estimated to be between $3 billion and $7.5 billion. NETL is
pursuing opportunities to license the patent for applications in fields other than fossil-fueled power generation.
DOE Celebrates Success of Regional Carbon Sequestration Partnerships
A report released by DOEs Office of Fossil Energy details the success of the Regional Carbon Sequestration Partnerships in laying the groundwork for field testing
and verifying carbon sequestration technologies in the near-term.
Development of Turbine Blade Monitor Makes Major Progress
Researchers at Siemens Power Generation, with funding from the U.S. Department of Energy, have produced high-speed infrared images of the first row of blades
in a Westinghouse 501FD gas turbine under full operation. Once perfected, online
monitoring will detect the integrity of thermal barrier coatings as they operate within the gas turbine. This technological breakthrough could help keep electricity rates
down by saving gas turbine utility operators an estimated $600 million per year.
Direct FuelCell Technology Advances
FuelCell Energy of Danbury, CT, developed its patented Direct FuelCell technology in a research partnership with DOE that began more than 25 years ago. By
October 2004, more than 50 million kilowatt hours of electricity had been generated
from power plants incorporating Direct FuelCell technology.
Weyburn Project Demonstrates Safety and Permanence of Sequestration
A multi-national project that includes DOEs Office of Fossil Energy has injected
more than 100 billion cubic feet of 95 percent pure carbon dioxide into the Weyburn
oil field in Saskatchewan, near the North Dakota border, demonstrating the safety
and permanence of sequestration while producing more than six mullion barrels of
oil.
Clean Coal Project Continues to Pay Back Taxpayer Investment
The Advanced Flue Gas Desulfurization Demonstration Project, selected as part
of the DOE Clean Coal Technology Demonstration Program, is the first clean coal
technology project to accumulate over $1 million in repayments, and represents
more than half of all repayment funds collected under the Clean Coal Technology
Demonstration Program. The projects advanced desulfurization unit continues to
operate commercially, scrubbing approximately 70,000 tons of sulfur dioxide annually at the Northern Indiana Public Service Companys Bailly Generating Stations
near Chesterton, IN.
Florida Demo Tames High Sulfur Coal
Recent tests with one of the Nations mid- to high-sulfur coals have further
verified that a new electric generation technology in its first large-scale utility demonstration at JEAs Northside Generating Station in Jacksonville, FL, is one of the
worlds cleanest coal-based power plants.
Questions submitted by Representative Jerry F. Costello
FutureGen
Q1. I am pleased to see the Administrations continued support for the FutureGen
Initiative with a $54 million budget request for FY07. This funding request
keeps the program on schedule as outlined in the FutureGen Report to Congress.
My question pertains to the $203 million balance that has been set aside for

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FutureGen for FY08 and beyond. Is $203 million enough to fund FutureGen beyond FY08?
A1. The $203 million will provide sufficient funding for the government cost-share
for FY 2008 and most of FY 2009. As indicated in the funding profile (in unescalated
2003 dollars) outlined in the FutureGen Program Plan submitted to Congress on
March 4, 2004, additional funding would be required to complete the planned FY
2009 expenditures and for subsequent years for the government cost-share. In addition, funding is also required from the private sector partners and from international partners.
Advanced Energy Initiative
Q2. The Presidents Advanced Energy Initiative provides a 22 percent increase for
research that can help reduce Americas dependence on foreign oil and advance
clean energy technologies. Can you please indicate what types of research and
give the percentage they will receive to equal the 22 percent increase?
A2. The attached table provides the types of research and details the percentages
they will receive to equal 22 percent.

Questions submitted by Representative Eddie Bernice Johnson


Q1. Last fall the President and you announced a major energy efficiency initiative,
and two weeks ago the White House signed an interagency MOU calling for energy efficiency measure throughout the Federal Government. Then we get a
budget that slashes the exact program that will accomplish this. Please tell the
Committee how we are supposed to take seriously the Administrations commit-

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ment to energy efficiency when you give us a request that makes a mockery of
it?
A1. The Departments FY 2007 budget request maintains robust funding levels in
a variety of energy efficiency programs. While funding for the Federal Energy Management Program is down $2 million compared to FY 2006 appropriations; the decrease reflects the contribution of new efficiencies within the program that will
allow the Department to achieve the same or even better results with less money.
In addition, the Department requests a $2 million increase for an enhanced Technology Advancement and Outreach effort that will build upon FEMP outreach efforts. Finally, it is important to note that FEMP merely facilitates energy efficiency
improvements. Agencies are responsible for improving energy management, making
cost effective energy efficiency investments, and procuring energy efficient products
(such as Energy Star products) that will help them achieve their energy efficiency
goals.
Q2. The Industries of the Future program at DOE has a long history of supporting
R&D that improves energy efficiency in some of our most valued core domestic
industries, the same industries that are rapidly heading overseas. Yet, this administration continues to decrease support of this program at a time when it is
most needed. Please explain how 30 percent decrease in funding will affect our
core domestic industrial sections.
A2. While industry remains a major energy end-use sector of the Nations economy,
significant gains in energy efficiency have already been achieved (output since the
1970s has more than doubled for essentially the same energy consumption). Since
significant economic incentives exist for industry to continue on its own to invest
in new, more efficient technologies, the Department is shifting some of its limited
resources toward higher-priority R&D areas, such as reducing our growing national
dependence on foreign oil. At the same time, the Industrial Technologies Program
is refocusing its activities for maximum benefits from its appropriations.
Question submitted by Representative Michael M. Honda
Q1. I was hoping you could help me to understand the rationale behind the planned
termination of the Industrial Assessment Centers over the next two years. My understanding of the program is that it funds a network of universities which send
graduate engineering students out to small and medium sized manufacturers,
conducting energy audits that identify a range of low and modest cost efficiency
improvements. It seems like this program is right in line with the Administrations goal of training more engineers and scientists in the energy field, and it
provides real help to U.S. manufacturers struggling to cope with energy prices.
Alumni are very much in demand by the top firms as energy managers who can
come in with real-world knowledge and experience to work on projects immediately and improve the bottom line. Can you explain why DOE would want to
eliminate this program, given the Presidents stated commitment to competitiveness, energy efficiency, and energy independence?
A1. With rare exception, the Administration has not made budget decisions beyond
FY 2007. The Departments five-year budget profiles represent scenarios or options
that could be considered during budget development in future years.
That said, while industry remains a major energy end-use sector of the Nations
economy, significant gains in energy efficiency have already been achieved (output
since the 1970s has more than doubled for essentially the same energy consumption,
in large part because of improved efficiency). Significant economic incentives exist
for industry to continue on its own to invest in new, more efficient technologies. In
the FY 2007 Budget, the Department focuses its resources toward higher-priority
R&D areas outlined in the Presidents Advanced Energy Initiative.
Questions submitted by Representative Brian Baird
BPA Debt Prepayment Proposal
Q1. As stated in the Presidents Budget, the Bonneville Power Authority provides
about 40 percent of the Pacific NW regions electric energy supply and threefourths of the regions electric power transmission capacity. Clearly, BPA plays
a vital role in keeping the lights on in the Pacific NW region. Knowing of BPAs
importance to the Pacific NW region, why is it that the Administration did not
consult with any Members of the Pacific NW before moving forward with the

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BPA secondary revenue proposal? Knowing of the Pacific NW delegations disapproval of the process, will you commit to meeting with the delegation to discuss the proposal?
A1. The Presidents Budget is developed inside the Executive Branch. Following the
release of the Presidents budget on February 6, 2006, I have remained committed
to meet with members of the regions congressional delegation to address concerns
and ensure that an undue burden is not placed on the Pacific Northwest rate payers. I respect and welcome your desire to discuss these issues further with the Administration.
Q2. According to a February 8, 2006, analysis by the non-partisan Northwest Power
and Conservation Council, the OMB proposal will result in a rate increase of
at least 6.6 percent, raising power rates by $145 million a year, costing retail
consumers an additional $26.13 a year (energy intensive industries, such as
pulp and paper mills, will suffer even more), decreasing personal income in the
Northwest by $109 million, and resulting in the loss of 1,120 jobs. Did OMB
conduct any sort of analysis of the macro-economic impact of this proposal prior
to its release? Does the OMB have any data to refute the aforementioned study?
A2. Although to our knowledge OMB did not conduct a detailed macro-economic
analysis of the budget proposal we believe it is sound business practice to use higher-than-historical revenues to pay down debt, which will allow for additional flexibility and ability to make necessary future investments in energy infrastructure for
the benefit of the Northwest economy. The Administrations intent is to capture the
unique potential opportunities offered in the short-term by high natural gas prices
to derive a long-term benefit for Pacific Northwest rate payers. This proposal will
be more fully assessed in an expedited BPA rate case to implement the policy of
advance payments on Treasury bonds with net secondary revenues that exceed $500
million annually.
Q3. The budget states that the reason for the secondary revenue initiative is so that
BPA can pay down debt and invest back into energy infrastructure. However,
BPA is not in jeopardy of missing a Treasury payment. In fact, they have made
their Treasury payment on time and in full for more than 20 years running. In
addition, Bonneville has voluntarily made more than $1.46 billion in early payments on its federal debt over the last couple of years. Contrary to OMBs current proposal, this was done without raising rates. If this secondary revenue proposal moves forward, how can you ensure that payments would, in fact, be used
to pay down BPAs debt or invested in infrastructure, instead of redirected by
the Administration to fulfill a different purpose?
A3. BPAs payments to the Treasury are used to pay down BPAs federal debt consistent with the sound business practices required under the law including the Federal Columbia River Transmission System Act of 1974, and consistent with statutory
priority of payment requirements. This Administrations proposal does not change
that current law. Moreover, and just as with BPAs past early payments on its bonded debt, the proposal in the budget would free up available borrowing authority that
BPA will be able to use. Recent debt optimization early prepayments have not resulted in higher rates because we structured the bonds to avoid upward rate pressure and we amortized debt with on-average higher interest rates.
Additionally, from a technical perspective, BPA has a mandate to operate on a
self-financing basis and all receipts and expenditures are processed through the
BPA Fund, a public enterprise revolving fund account within Treasury. Therefore,
through established Treasury collection mechanisms, all secondary revenue receipts
would be directed to the BPA Fund and accordingly, BPA would, initiate
intragovernmental repayment transactions with Treasurys Bureau of the Public
Debt to pay down BPAs debt. The Bureau of Public Debt maintains the detailed
records of the debt securities transactions between the Department of the Treasury
and other federal agencies such as BPA. (Prepared by: Roger Seifert)
Q4. How does the Administration justify demanding BPA pay the Treasury an arbitrary surplus above $500 million in revenue-producing years (when BPA is
keeping rates level or possibly lowering rates), when the Administration has not
been willing to offer any additional assistance in years with a loss of revenue,
such as the energy crisis, when rates skyrocketed? Does the Administration have
a plan in place under this proposal to assist BPA in times of revenue loss as
they take away BPAs flexibility to level out energy rates?
A4. The Administrations intent is to capture the potential unique opportunities offered in the short-term by high natural gas prices to derive long-term benefit for

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rate payers. I remain committed to meet with members of the regions Congressional
delegation to address concerns and ensure that an undue burden is not placed on
the Northwest rate payers.
Q5. If funding for Hanford nuclear reservation clean-up was held level with 2005
funding, it would be $2.221 Billion, which is $376 million higher than the Presidents Budget Request for 2007, adjusted for inflation. Instead, the request is
$1.845 billion, including using $78 million for security, rather than cleanup.
The Presidents budget request for Hanford Clean-Up cuts funds for cleanup of
contaminated soil and groundwater; and, reduces funding for the safe storage,
monitoring and retrieval of High-Level Nuclear Wastes by $44 million in 2007.
How does the Administration plan on making up this shortfall now and in future years as Hanford, the largest nuclear waste dump in the Western Hemisphere, continues to be under-funded by the Administration and pose a public
health and environmental risk to our nation?
A5. The 2007 Budget requests $1.9 billion for the Hanford site, an increase of $135
million above the 2006 enacted level. We remain committed to completing the Environmental Management (EM) mission in a manner that is protective of the environment and public.
Questions submitted by Representative Jim Matheson
Q1. DOE estimated that the cleanup costs for the Moab uranium mill tailings site
is $420 million. The groundwater cleanup is an estimated $70 million in addition. The Administrations FY 2007 budget request provides $22.8 million. As
we discussed during your recent appearance before the Committee, please provide a project schedule that identifies estimated annual expenditures and activities that will take place each year.
A1. On August 25, 2005, the Deputy Secretary approved Critical Decision (CD) 0,
which approves mission need for the Uranium Mill Tailings Remedial Action Project
at Moab, Utah. The outyear funding profile and activities to be performed will be
established as the Department moves through the CD1, approval of preliminary
baseline range, and CD2, approval of performance baseline, decision processes. The
approval memorandum on the CD0 decision directed the Office of Environmental
Management to develop an Acquisition Strategy in accordance with Department of
Energy (DOE) Order 413.3, Project Management for the Acquisition of Capital Assets. The CD1, Major System Project Acquisition Strategy, details the project
schedule, major work activities, estimated annual expenditures for the life-cycle of
the project, and the various acquisition alternatives. The CD1 package has been
developed and is being reviewed within DOE Headquarters, approval is expected
next month. Once approved, the selected acquisition alternative will be executed to
procure contractors who have the responsibility of developing a project baseline and
cost estimate that can be validated and approved by the DOE, as part of the CD
2 decision process.
Q2. Does the budget for this year include funding to continue monitoring nine wells
installed in 2003 as part of research conducted by the University of Utah which
led to the Investigation of the Hydrologic Connection between the Moab Mill
Tailings and the Matheson Wetlands Preserve (Gardener and Solomon, December 2003) report? It is my understanding that since 2003, there has been no systematic sampling of these wells on the part of the Department of Energy. Do any
projections for future years include funding for monitoring? If not, why not?
A2. Yes. The Department of Energy (DOE) understands your concern regarding potential migration beneath the Colorado River to the Matheson Wetlands Preserve
located across the Colorado River from the Moab Remedial Action Project site. The
DOE sampled the subject wells in 2003 to establish a baseline in order to determine
whether there was any contamination migrating to or on the Matheson Wetlands
Preserve and found no evidence of contamination. The wells were sampled again in
late 2005, confirming the statement contained in the 2005 Final Environmental Impact Statement that groundwater discharge and potential contaminates do not migrate from the Moab site, beneath the river, to the Matheson Wetlands Preserve.
On November 16, 2005, DOE committed to continue to sample the subject wells,
plus 25 additional existing monitoring wells, and three surface water locations in
the Matheson Wetlands Preserve. In FY 2006, DOE plans to spend more than $1
million to sample all of these locations three times during the year, concurrent with
the routine sampling DOE is performing at the Moab Remedial Action Project site,
and to expand the interim ground water cleanup action, which has been expanded

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each year for the last four years. Expansion of the interim ground water actions continues to reduce the amount of contaminants that may migrate to the Colorado
River. The results of this additional sampling should provide further support to
DOEs environmental assessment, thus alleviating any concerns regarding potential
contaminant migration to the Matheson Wetlands Preserve. The results of all of the
sampling data and analysis, and environmental performance evaluations of our
ground water cleanup to date can be obtained on the Moab Remedial Action Project
web site (http://gj.em.doe.gov/moab). DOEs 2007 budget provides funding to continue monitoring, as appropriate.
Q3. Does the estimated cleanup cost for the project include what is commonly known
as community impact funding (i.e., funding to assist local counties and municipalities inform residents and visitors of cleanup efforts which may affect
them)? If not, why not? How will DOE ensure that locally affected residents and
visitors are safeguarded throughout the remediation of the site and the relocation of the tailings? What are the responsibilities of the not-yet selected contractor in terms of working with the local community?
A3. The estimated cleanup cost for Moab does not specifically include community
impact funding. Currently, the federal project staff at the Moab site promotes community outreach through participation in Cooperative Agency (12 State and federal
agencies) Meetings, led by the Executive Director of Environmental Quality for the
State of Utah (no regulatory role), which happens roughly quarterly. Typically, concurrent with these meetings, the Moab Federal Project Director conducts public
meetings at the cities of Moab and Thompson Spring to update the public on site
activities, to present and discuss results of current monitoring data, to provide status relative to the ongoing interim ground water remediation activities, to provide
an update on characterization results at Crescent Junction Site (the uranium mill
tailings off-site disposal location) and vicinity properties, and as part of the project
planning process to inform the public about overall project progress. The Department of Energy (DOE) has a detailed Moab Project Public Participation Plan that
can be obtained on the Moab Remedial Action Project web site (http://
gj.em.doe.gov/moab). In addition, the federal project staff has implemented emergency response plans in coordination with local and State officials and has presented the necessary information at the public meetings. The federal project staff
is frequently in contact with the appropriate local officials on all matters pertaining
to public safety, including coordinating future work activities that involve use of
public roadways. The DOE would expect any future contractors to build upon the
efforts made to date by DOE to work with the local community, State and federal
agencies, and stakeholders.

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ANSWERS

TO

POST-HEARING QUESTIONS

Responses by David A. Sampson, Deputy Secretary, Department of Commerce


Questions submitted by Chairman Sherwood L. Boehlert
Q1. The Fiscal Year 2007 (FY07) budget request includes plans to enhance the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) presence at the National
Synchrotron Light Source (NSLS) at Brookhaven National Laboratory, a Department of Energy research facility. The Department of Energy is planning to
build NSLSII, ultimately as a replacement for the current Brookhaven light
source. How will NIST coordinate its proposed investments at the existing NSLS
with Brookhavens plans for a newer facility? How will NIST coordinate its proposed investments with DOEs instrumentation plans for their entire suite of
light sources?
A1. The National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) has been a respected and valued on-site partner with the Department of Energy (DOE) for over
twenty years in the joint operation of synchrotron beamlines at the National Synchrotron Light Source (NSLS). NIST management is coordinating with Dr. Steven
Dierker, the Brookhaven National Laboratory Associate Director responsible for the
NSLSII Project, on the development of novel, advanced measurement capabilities
for both the existing NSLS and the planned NSLSII. The entire suite of NIST endstation measurement instrumentation will be migrated to the NSLSII in a manner
that assures that the NIST capabilities complement Brookhavens proposed investments at the new facility. On a broader level, NIST will coordinate its planned investments through Dr. Dierker and the DOE Office of Science, and via its own representative, Dr. Patrick Gallagher, on the Office of Science and Technology Policy
interagency working group established to report on the Nations synchrotron facilities.
Q2. NIST sent teams to hurricane-affected areas last year to study some of the damage and learn about the impacts of the storms on buildings and other structures.
NIST chose not to invoke the National Construction Safety Team Act (NCST),
which would have given it subpoena power over documents and other evidence
to contribute to its investigation. Another team assembled by the National
Science Foundation encountered problems accessing sites and could have used
subpoena authority during its investigation of levee failure in the area. Did
NIST encounter problems accessing sites during its hurricane assessments? Does
NIST plan to invoke the NCST more routinely during future investigations of
building failures?
A2. NIST assembled a team of 26 experts from federal agencies, academia, and private industry to conduct reconnaissance of damage to major buildings, physical infrastructure, and residential structures in areas affected by Hurricane Katrina and
Hurricane Rita. During its deployments to the field, NIST coordinated with local authorities, building and facility owners and operators, and federal agencies to obtain
access to sites and, as a result, NIST encountered few problems accessing sites during its field reconnaissance. The one exception was petrochemical plants in Texas
as these plants were in the process of restarting operations and there were legitimate safety concerns involved. However, damage to these facilities was limited and
NIST determined through visual observation and discussions with company personnel that access was not essential to the reconnaissance.
NIST has several authorities under which it can conduct an investigation. The
NIST Director selects the most appropriate authority to get the job done. NIST will
invoke the NCST whenever it is the appropriate authority to use, i.e., in the wake
of any building failure that has resulted in a substantial loss of life or that posed
significant potential of substantial loss of life. The building failure must also meet
the additional requirements set out in the procedures for the establishment and deployment of teams that have been developed by NIST which were called for in the
NCST Act.
Q3. NIST is the coordinating agency for the National Earthquake Hazard Reduction
Program (NEHRP), but only has approximately $1 million in its FY06 budget
for both program management and research activities. Please explain what
NEHRP activities NIST will undertake in FY06, and how the approximately
$700,000 in new funding requested in FY07 for NEHRP will be used.
A3. For FY 2006, NIST has redirected $750,000 of its approximately $914,000 in
NEHRP-related base research funding to support the NEHRP Lead Agency manage-

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ment function. This funding is being supplemented by $85,000 of support from each
of the other NEHRP agencies (FEMA, NSF, and the U.S. Geological Survey), providing approximately $1 million of total support for the Lead Agency management
function. The new NEHRP Secretariat became active in early February 2006, with
NISTs hiring of the first formal program Director, who comes to his new assignment after almost 18 years of research in the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, including 15 years of seismic engineering research.
Initial NEHRP Secretariat activities center on addressing high-priority requirements identified in the NEHRP Reauthorization Act of 2004, including:

Establishing the Interagency Coordinating Committee


Establishing the Advisory Committee for Earthquake Hazards Reduction
Developing an updated NEHRP Strategic Plan
Developing a NEHRP Management Plan
Developing a coordinated Interagency Budget for FY08 and beyond.

Beyond the $750,000 that was redirected to the NEHRP Secretariat function, approximately $160,000 of FY 2006 NEHRP research funding is being used to partially
support a much larger multi-year project addressing the prevention of progressive
collapse in buildings that are subject to catastrophic events, such as earthquakes,
fires, or explosions.
For FY 2007, the NEHRP base funding would be applied similarly as it is in FY
2006. In addition, approximately $800,000 of the new funding requested in the
Presidents FY 2007 budget will be used to begin implementation of the R&D roadmap developed by industry through the Applied Technology Council to close the research-to-practice gap and accelerate the use of new earthquake risk mitigation
technologies. This effort will initiate several projects that address critical topics supporting the development of Performance-Based Seismic Engineering (PBSE) and will
assist industry in improving building codes and standards, advance seismic engineering practice, and facilitate technology transfer for efforts that have been undertaken by NEHRP. All of these research efforts will be undertaken in close cooperation with practitioners and with standards and codes development bodies.
Q4. Many of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administrations (NOAAs) National Weather Services automated surface observing stations and its NOAA
Weather Radio antennas do not have backup electrical power and become inoperable during hurricanes and other sever weather events. To fix this problem,
in the FY06 hurricane supplemental, NOAA received $5 million to provide
backup power for those two systems in coastal areas. Will all the systems in hurricane-prone coastal areas be upgraded in time for the 2006 hurricane season?
If not, what percentage of upgrades do you anticipate will be complete in time
for the 2006 hurricane season, and what are the criteria for selecting which
areas to upgrade first?
A4. The Department of Defense, Emergency Supplemental Appropriations to Address
Hurricanes in the Gulf of Mexico, and Pandemic Influenza Act of 2006 (P.L. 109
148) included $4.9 million to provide backup emergency power for hurricane-prone
coastal Automated Surface Observing Systems and coastal NOAA Weather Radio
All-Hazards transmitters. NOAA will work as quickly as possible to upgrade the
equipment. The National Weather Service has begun engineering development (including site surveys and assessment of existing site power infrastructure requirements) and equipment procurement (generators and ancillary cables) for this effort.
We anticipate procurement of hardware for backup power to be completed by September 2006, with installations to commence in October/November. Initially, we will
focus on installations in Florida and the Gulf Coast region; we will then shift our
focus to the Atlantic Coast.
Q5. When asked last October, Max Mayfield (Director of the National Hurricane
Center) indicated that the five highest priority areas for improving hurricane
forecasts are improved computational capacity, research to improve hurricane
models, an expanded buoy network, improved satellite sensors, and additional
flight hours on hurricane hunters. Please explain where each of these priorities
is funded in NOAAs FY07 budget request, and the amount of funding provided
in the request. Please also describe what level of funding was provided for each
of these priorities in FY06, including which line office at NOAA received the
funding.
A5. Please see the attached table for the response to Question 5.

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Questions submitted by Representative Bart Gordon
Q1. For five years the Administration has either proposed eliminating or cutting
MEP funding by 50 percent. However, MEP is a partnership between State and
the Federal governments. What meetings have you had with State officials regarding your past or proposed budget cutsand by this I dont mean MEP Center Directors, but with the State officials which are responsible for allocating the
one-third matching funds? Why havent you consulted with the States?
A1. The FY 2007 budget request for the Hollings MEP is similar to previous years
and as such NIST is able to rely on responses provided by our stakeholders from
the three web cast and two regional meetings held during 2004. NIST will also actively engage our State partners in dialogue this year through a series of
roundtables. The first roundtable was held on March 15th in Columbus, OH. In addition, these meetings are designed to look at the future of manufacturing and how
the MEP partnership with the States can best address those needs.
Q2. What was the Departments analysis that shows that $47 million is enough
funding to maintain an effective network of national centers?
A2. The $47 million for the FY07 budget is consistent with the Presidents FY06
request. This year the Administration had to make tough budget decisions and set
priorities in a tight budget year. MEP is one part of the Administrations broader
plan to support small manufacturers. The President remains committed to strengthening the competitiveness of the Nations manufacturing industry and is focusing
efforts on the American Competitiveness Initiative to support innovation.
Q3. You have justified the MEP cut because the program has evolved to a stage
where less funding is requiredthis is different from past years justifications
for funding cuts. What is the analysis and criteria that you used to make this
determination? You have also justified the MEP cut because the program offers
services that are also provided by the private sector. Could you provide us with
the analysis that backs this assertion. The reason that I ask these questions, is
that the Department commissioned the National Academy of Public Administration (NAPA) to do a study on the MEP. One of their findings was: The small
manufacturing market is under-served in terms of assistance with productivity
and performance measures. The NAPA study also found that MEP did not displace private companies offering services to small manufacturers.
A3. Since taking office, the President has worked to improve the competitiveness
of the manufacturing industry in numerous ways, including providing tax relief that
benefits manufacturers of all sizes, and proposing an aggressive job training initiative.
The small manufacturing base is critical to the U.S. economy and integral to U.S.based supply chains. Accordingly, NIST supports the small manufacturing community not only through the Hollings MEP, but also through laboratory activity across
the Institute. More than half of the NIST lab activities are either directly or indirectly geared to enhancing manufacturing. The President has demonstrated his
strong commitment to the NIST laboratory programs by including them in the
American Competitiveness Initiative (ACI) for FY 2007. ACI increases funding for
the NIST laboratory and construction programs above the base level by 24 percent
to $535 million.
Q4. You justify eliminating the ATP because of the growth of venture capital funds
and other financial services for high-risk technology. This Committee has heard
repeatedly during the past four years that venture capital funds for high-risk
technology development are scarce. Could you provide us with the documentation
that supports your claims? Also, if venture capital funds are so plentiful for
high-risk, high tech projects, why is the Administration requesting funds for Red
Planet Fund at NASA which will be an ATP-like program at NASA?
A4. Data shows that there have been significant private equity funding available
and that the level of funding continues to be strong. A 2002 study by Lewis
Branscomb et al. at Harvard University that analyzed data from 1998 estimates
that between $5.4 billion (conservative estimate) and $35.5 billion (inclusive estimate) was invested in early stage technology development (Branscomb and
Auerswald, Between Invention and Innovation). These estimates include $1.4 billion
to $7.3 billion in investments from the Federal Government.
In 2005, venture capitalists invested $21.7 billion in 2,939 deals, which matched
the level invested in 2004. Funding for start-up and early stage companies slipped
slightly for the year to $4.1 billion in 922 deals compared to $4.4 billion in 2004.
Anecdotal evidence shows that 2006 will see an increase in early stage investing

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both in number of companies funded and amount of money invested, negating the
need for governmental support. (Source: National Venture Capital Association)
The Department of Commerces knowledge of the Red Planet Capital is limited;
therefore it would be inappropriate to comment on NASAs reasoning for requesting
its establishment.
Q5. You justify abolishing ATP because it only benefits a single company and not
industry at large and that American Competitiveness Initiative will not impact
individual company but be broadly based. The ATPs mandate is that it can
fund projects that will only have broad industry impacts far beyond private
profit. Ill cite just a few examples such as the two milli-meter project, the
Affymetrix DNA diagnostics project and the Integrated Circuit project; these
were successful APT projects which had broad industry impacts. Why doesnt the
ATP fit within the scope of the Administrations Initiative?
A5. The FY 2007 budget reflects the Administrations policy and funding priorities
to address the Nations most pressing needs. In contrast to ATP, the Presidents
American Competitiveness Initiative invests in broad basic research that will benefit entire industries. The request continues the orderly ATP phase-out that was initiated with recent appropriations and will meet all existing grant obligations.
Q6a. An article appeared in the February 11 issue of the St. Petersburg Times about
NOAAs proposal to offer early retirement to 1,000 employees of the weather
service. The article indicates a number of these positions may be permanently
cut and others will be filled through promotion of junior staff.
We are very concerned about the implications of this type of buy-out from the
perspective of public safety and continuity of service at the weather service.
What implications does this plan have for the future of 24/7 coverage that is
now provided through all of the weather forecasting offices (WFO)?
A6a. The Voluntary Early Retirement Authority is no longer under consideration as
it is too late in the fiscal year to achieve significant savings.
Q6b. Is the Administration planning to reduce the routine hours of service delivery
from some or all of the WFOs?
A6b. There are currently no plans to reduce the routine hours of service delivery
at any Weather Forecast Offices.
Q7. Mr. Sampson, your testimony highlights the requested increases for the new satellite systemsGOESR and NPOESS. Well, as you know we cannot really
evaluate the request for the NPOESS program because there have been so many
schedule delays and cost overruns that it is now under complete review within
the Department of Defenses Nunn-McCurdy process.
At this point, NPOESSits cost and scheduleare both very uncertain and the
risk of a data gap is very high. What commitment is the Administration prepared to makein dollars and actionsto ensure this new system is delivered
in time to ensure the continuity of weather forecasting data? Is the Administration prepared to amend the FY07 request and ask for additional funds to ensure
the continuity of our weather forecasting enterprise? If additional funds are required should we expect cuts to other NOAA programs to offset the NPOESS increases?
A7. The Administration remains committed to polar satellite data continuity. These
data are the foundation for our global weather models, which are critical to our midto long-range forecasts. The Administration is aggressively addressing the issues related to the NPOESS Program. Pursuant to Title 10 USC 2433, the Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition, Technology and Logistics (USD (AT&L) ) has directed a full Nunn-McCurdy review that requires a written certification to be presented to Congress with supporting explanation that:
1. the acquisition program is essential to national security;
2. there are no alternatives to such acquisition program which will provide
equal or greater military capability at less cost;
3. the new estimates of the program acquisition unit cost or procurement unit
cost are reasonable; and
4. the management structure for the acquisition program is adequate to manage and control program acquisition unit cost or procurement unit cost.
Under the leadership of USD (AT&L), the Department of Defense has convened
four working groups to address these criteria and has invited NOAA and the Na-

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tional Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) to participate as full partners
in all four working groups. A decision is expected no earlier than June 5, 2006.
Until that decision has been made, it would be premature for the Administration
to amend the FY 2007 Presidents budget to request additional funds. There are currently no plans to cut other NOAA programs to offset any possible NPOESS increases. The Administration will conduct a full briefing for the House Science Committee soon after the final Nunn-McCurdy decision is reached in June 2006.
Q8a. Your written testimony indicates that NOAAs FY 2007 request includes an increase for the tsunami warning system of $12 million bringing the total funding for the tsunami warning system to about $20 million per year. We are all
pleased to have the system expanded to cover both of our coasts and the budget
request appears to contain sufficient funds to operate and maintain the system.
However, the request for the Tsunami Hazard Mitigation Program receives no
increase for FY 2007 and the TsunamiReady Program is reduced by $1 millionan 80 percent reduction from the FY 2006 enacted levels. The budget request for these two programs confirms concerns raised by Members of this committee when the expansion of the system was proposedthat we would have
the technology in place, but would not have the funds to enable State and local
governments to prepare themselves to heed the warnings the system delivers.
The utility of the warning network is dependent upon the work done to prepare
coastal communities through the Mitigation Program and TsunamiReady program.
Why were these funds not increased to accommodate the increased number of
State and local communities that will now be served by the network?
A8a. Prior to the Administrations commitment to accelerate its U.S. Tsunami
Warning System (FY 20052006), the National Tsunami Hazard Mitigation Program (NTHMP) was NOAAs primarily vehicle to test many of the improvements
made to the existing U.S. Tsunami Warning Program. NOAAs development, deployment and initial maintenance and operation of its Deep-ocean Assessment and Reporting of Tsunami stations were funded by the NTHMP. Similarly, NOAA tsunami
inundation mapping and modeling efforts were also tested and funded by the
NTHMP. Finally, the NTHMP funded many of the improvements made by the
USGS in upgrading and expanding its network of real-time reporting seismometers
along the West Coast and Alaska.
During the past ten years of the NTHMP, over 60 percent of the NTHMP funding
supported these hazard detection efforts. Under the Administrations plan to
strengthen the U.S. Tsunami Warning Program (which began with the FY 2005 supplemental request), these key programs initially developed and funded by the
NTHMP are fully funded by the new program. Consequently, in FY 2007, NTHMP
funding will be used only to fund State and local tsunami awareness and tsunami
mitigation effortsand not tsunami detection efforts. This shift in funding requirements allows NOAA to more than double NTHMP funding support for State and
local tsunami awareness and tsunami mitigation efforts.
Q8b. Will the west coast states involved in the Mitigation Program have their funds
reduced or will there be no funds for the east coast states and Caribbean territories? How does NOAA intend to allocate the limited funds available to the
states and territories?
A8b. As stated above, in FY 2007 NOAA expects to use 100 percent of available
NTHMP funding to support State and local tsunami awareness and tsunami mitigation efforts. The NTHMP steering committee, comprised of representatives from
NOAA, the Federal Emergency Management Agency, the U.S. Geological Survey
and the States of Hawaii, Alaska, Washington, Oregon, and California endorsed the
concept of forming regions, which would receive and distribute funds. All coastal
states and U.S. Territories at-risk from a tsunami are invited to participate in this
process. In FY 2006, NOAA plans to schedule a series of NTHMP meetings involving (1) the original five states (HI, AK, WA, OR, and CA), (2) southern U.S. coastal
states and territories with tsunami vulnerabilities, and (3) east coast states with
tsunami vulnerabilities. At these meetings, discussions will be held regarding the
future of the NTHMP.
Q9. Mr. Sampson, the President requested and the Congress agreed to provide a pay
raise for federal employees. However, over the past few years the extra funds for
the pay raise have not been fully budgeted for in either the appropriations bills
or the Presidents request for NOAA. As you know, when this happens the funds

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to meet the pay raise are acquired by other means including drawing from the
programs and imposing hiring freezes.
Q9a. How much funding will be diverted from program activities in FY 2006 to
cover the cost of the pay raise?
A9a. The FY 2006 Presidents Budget included funding for a 2.3 percent pay raise.
Congress enacted a 3.1 percent pay raise in legislation, but did not provide the funding to cover the full raise. NOAA absorbed $6.2 million in FY 2006.
Q9b. The FY 2007 request includes a request for funds to cover the pay raise. How
much of the total cost of the pay raise is covered by the request?
A9b. In the FY 2007 Presidents Budget, the Administration proposes a 2.2 percent
standard pay raise for most federal employees. This raise is covered completely
within the request, totaling $17.423 million.
Q9c. Does the FY 2007 request for these funds recover the deficit from previous years
or are these funds only to cover the pay raise for FY 2007?
A9c. The FY 2007 Presidents Budget funds only the 2.2 percent pay raise associated with the FY 2007 request. There is no provision in the request to recover the
pay raise differential from previous years; however, $4.662 million is included to annualize the January 2006 pay raise.
Q10. The Administration is requesting $3.5 million in additional funds above the FY
2006 enacted level to ensure the wind profiler information remains available
to weather forecasters. We realize the transmission frequency for the profilers
must be converted to avoid a conflict with new search and rescue satellites.
How many profilers will be converted to the new frequency with the proposed
FY 2007 funds? What is the estimate for the total cost to complete the conversion of all profilers?
A10. The FY 2007 request includes a $3.5 million increase to begin the required development and re-engineering to convert the existing Wind Profilers in order to
avoid frequency conflicts with the planned European Space Administrations (ESA)
30-satellite Galileo Global Positioning System network. No wind profilers will be
converted to the new frequency with FY 2007 funds. FY 2007 funds are for re-engineering design and production of the prototype unit. Contingent upon the availability of funding, NOAA projects to complete the conversion of the 32 existing Wind
Profilers that operate on conflicting frequencies (404 MHZ) by the end of FY 2010.
The projected total cost to convert these 32 wind profilers is estimated at $13.2 million. There are five additional profilers in the network which already operate on a
non-interfering frequency.
Q11. The Administration is requesting a restoration of funding for the Space Environment Center (SEC) of $3.2 million above the FY 2006 enacted levels. Our
understanding from the hearing we held in this committee during the last Congress is that even the $7 million range of funding is not going to permit much,
if any, upgrade to space weather forecasting services. Is that the case? The SEC
relies upon data collected from instruments on several satellite systems, including a NASA research satellite (ACE). What is the anticipated life-span of the
current ACE satellite? What plans does NOAA have to replace the data stream
from the ACE sensors once the current ACE satellite mission has ended?
A11. The FY 2007 requests restoration of $3.2 million to the Space Environment
Centers (SEC) operating budget. This $3.2 million will allow the SEC to be funded
at the $7.347 million level. At this $7.347 million level, the SEC will have sufficient
funding to continue its improved suite of space weather forecasts and products. The
funds requested are necessary to operate and perform critical research at the SEC.
SEC warnings and forecasts are relied upon by NASA, the DOD, power industries,
private satellite operators, and the airlines and communications industries for realtime forecasts and warnings of high-frequency radio blackouts caused by solar
flares, solar radiation storms, and geomagnetic storms.
The NASA ACE satellite is a research satellite that the SEC has used for observing solar activity. The SEC also uses capabilities from NOAA GEOS, NOAA POES,
and DODs DMSP for space weather forecasting. While the ACE satellite has outlived its scheduled research life-span, its unique orbit (one million miles) requires
minimal fuel to maintain. NASA projects sufficient ACE fuel reserves to maintain
its orbit for many years. In anticipation of potential future ACE data loss, the SEC
is planning to hold a stakeholder meeting to assure understanding of the situation
and ensure users know the impact and any loss of certain products and efforts.

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Questions submitted by Representative Vernon J. Ehlers
Q1. In October 2005, the Science Committee held a hearing on the final report of
the NIST investigation into the collapse of World Trade Centers 1, 2, and 7. At
this hearing, the Committee learned that, based on the recommendations contained in this report, NIST would be working with codes and standards groups
to submit proposed changes to the International Building Code, the deadline for
which is March 24th, 2006. Where is NIST in this process? What specific
changes will be proposed, and does NIST have supporters who will champion
these proposals in the ICC?
A1. After issuing the final report, NIST assigned top priority to work vigorously
with the building and fire safety communities to assure that there is a complete understanding of the recommendations and to provide needed technical assistance in
getting them implemented. NIST has implemented a web-based system (http://
wtc.nist.gov/recommendations/recommendations.htm) so that the public can track
the progress on implementing the recommendations. The web site lists each of the
recommendations, the specific organizations (e.g., standards and code developers,
professional groups, State and local authorities) responsible for its implementation,
the status of the implementation by organization, and the plans or work in progress
to implement the recommendations. The status of the implementation of the recommendations is current as of January 31, 2006. The status will be updated periodically to report progress.
NIST has been working vigorously with the building code experts who were convened pursuant to a contract to the National Institute of Building Sciences (NIBS)
to translate the NIST WTC recommendations into code change proposals. Key representatives of the International Code Council (ICC) (as well as other standards and
code organizations) are actively engaged in this effort and submitted code change
proposals for the International Building Code. The NIBS building code experts and
the ICC representatives are expected to champion these proposals in the ICC.
Q2. The Presidents fiscal year 2007 budget request includes $2 million for a project
to increase the resilience of structures and communities to hurricanes, fires, and
earthquakes. Some of this funding would be used to conduct research on multihazard failure analysis and the role of fire in the progressive collapse of structures. That kind of research was recommended in NISTs Report on the Collapse
of the World Trade Center Towers. This report recommended several other areas
where further research was needed (such as testing protocols for wind loads on
tall building or improving test methods for fireproofing materials) but those
areas are not funded in the FY07 budget request. What was the rationale behind
selecting multi-hazard and fire failures for funding?
A2. The decision-making rationale for selecting the program elements of the Structural Safety in Hurricanes, Fires, and Earthquakes was based on consideration of
several factors. First, this request will permit NIST to carry out critical R&D to reduce the vulnerability of citizens and the built environment to these natural disasters. Each year the United States suffers an estimated $52 billion in property damage, disruption of commerce, and lost lives due to natural disasters.
Another factor is that this proposed program is focused directly on providing some
of the solutions demanded by four of the six Grand Challenges outlined by the Presidents National Science and Technology Councils Subcommittee on Disaster Reduction.
Finally, the initiative complements existing efforts from previous appropriations.
In addition to redirected internal base funds, the Congress has appropriated $3 million in FY 2003 and $2 million in FY 2005 for research related to our World Trade
Center research effort.
Q3. And finally, how many Neutron facilities in the world would be considered
world class, and where are they?

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In terms of impact, the NCNR consistently ranks in the top three facilities worldwide. The preceding graph shows the results of an analysis from Christian Vettier
from the Institute Laue-Langevin (ILL) which is widely regarded as the leading
neutron facility in the world. It shows the number of papers published in high-impact journals over a five-year period.
In terms of capability (intensity plus number of instruments) the leading world
wide facilities include the following facilities (taken from Table 3 of the OSTP report
on the Status and Needs of Major Neutron Scattering Facilities and Instruments in
the United States). Top three indicated above line:

Questions submitted by Representative Eddie Bernice Johnson


Q1. You justify eliminating the Advanced Technology Program because of the growth
of venture capital funds and other financial services for high-risk technology.
This committee has heard repeatedly during the past four years that venture
capital funds for high-risk technology development are scarce. Could you provide
us with the documentation that supports your claims?
A1. Data shows that there have been significant private equity funding available
and that the level of funding continues to be strong. A 2002 study by Lewis
Branscomb et al. at Harvard University that analyzed data from 1998 estimates
that between $5.4 billion (conservative estimate) and $35.5 billion (inclusive estimate) was invested in early stage technology development (Branscomb and
Auerswald, Between Invention and Innovation). These estimates include $1.4 billion
to $7.3 billion in investments from the Federal Government.

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In 2005, venture capitalists invested $21.7 billion in 2,939 deals, which matched
the level invested in 2004. Funding for start-up and early stage companies slipped
slightly for the year to $4.1 billion in 922 deals compared to $4.4 billion in 2004.
Anecdotal evidence shows that 2006 will see an increase in early stage investing
both in number of companies funded and amount of money invested, negating the
need for governmental support. (Source: National Venture Capital Association)
Q2. Since 2001, we have lost 2.8 million manufacturing jobs; last year alone we lost
another 55,000 manufacturing jobs. These jobs are high-skill, high-wage jobs
that on average pay 23 percent more than the national average.
I would like for you to explain to our constituents why the Administration proposes to gut the Manufacturing Extension Program that has a proven track
record in creating and retaining good jobs.
A2. The budget constraints have forced the Administration to make some difficult
budget decisionsin this case reducing the Hollings MEP. MEP is just one method
by which NIST supports small manufacturers. More than half of the NIST lab activities are either directly or indirectly geared to enhancing manufacturing.
The President has demonstrated his strong commitment to the NIST laboratory
programs by including them in the American Competitiveness Initiative (ACI) for
FY 2007. ACI increases funding for the NIST laboratory and construction programs
above the base level by 24 percent to $535 million.

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ANSWERS

TO

POST-HEARING QUESTIONS

Responses by Arden L. Bement, Jr., Director, National Science Foundation


Questions submitted by Chairman Sherwood L. Boehlert
Q1. The Fiscal Year 2007 (FY07) budget request includes an eight percent increase
in funding for nanotechnology R&D at the National Science Foundation (NSF).
What level of funding will NSF be devoting to studying potential environmental
and safety implications associated with nanotechnology? How does this compare
to FY06, in terms of funding and subject matter? How is NSFs nanotechnology
environmental and safety research coordinated with R&D supported by other
agencies on potential new nanotechnology products? How is it coordinated with
the needs of regulatory agencies?
A1. The FY 2007 Budget Request includes $59 million in funding for the societal
implications of nanotechnology research and developmentthis is a 7.6 percent
($7.55 million) increase over FY 2006.
A portion of this investment$25.65 millionwill be directed toward studying
the potential environmental and safety implications associated with nanotechnology.
This is a 16 percent ($3.55 million) increase from FY 2006. This research will be
directed at the impact of nanoparticles and nanostructured materials in the environment, including air, water, soil, biosystems, and the work environment. It also will
study the non-clinical biological implications of nanoparticles. In 2007, however, research will expand beyond passive nanostructures to include the implications of active nanostructures and nanosystems.
NSF collaborates with other agencies on environmental and safety research
through the National Nanotechnology Initiative (NNI). One example of this collaboration is the joint program solicitation on Nanotechnology Research Grants Investigating Environmental and Human Health Effects of Manufactured
Nanomaterials. This collaboration is with the Environmental Protection Agency,
the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health, and NIHs National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS). The Nanomaterials Environmental and Health Implications (NEHI) working group facilitates the coordination
with other research and regulatory agencies.
Q2. How will the new Research and Evaluation on Education in Science and Engineering (REESE) program on what works, why, and for whom in math and
science education coordinate with the Science of Learning Centers already underway at NSF? How have results from REESEs predecessor programResearch, Evaluation and Communicationaffected NSFs K12 programs and
how are results from REESE expected to affect them in the future?
A2. The new Research and Evaluation on Education in Science and Engineering
(REESE) program coordinates with the Science of Learning Centers (SLC) on several levels. At the NSF management level, one of the REESE program officers is
the EHR representative to the SLC coordinating committee. At the scientific level,
three of the four Principal Investigators for SLC centers are grantees of the Research on Learning and Education (ROLE) program, a predecessor to REESE. In addition, many of the co-Principal Investigators are also grantees of the ROLE program. At the discipline level, the SLCs are participating in the major meetings for
education researchers (including the American Education Research Association
meeting and the International Conference on the Learning Sciences meeting).
Results from REESEs predecessor programs (primarily ROLE) in the Research,
Evaluation and Communication (REC) division have influenced NSFs K12 programs in a variety of ways, thereby ensuring that practice is informed by research.
Here are two examples:
1. An Interagency Education Research Initiative (IERI) project developed and
distributed modeling and simulation software for biology, chemistry, and
physics to over 250 high schools in a project called Modeling across the Curriculum. The use of this software has been shown to improve the performance of students taking science courses. Early research for the IERI project
was supported by ROLE.
2. ROLE supported research that led to the development of cognitive tutors
that provide individualized guidance to learners. Now these tutor systems
help more than 325,000 middle school and high school students in 750 school
districts learn complex problem-solving skills in areas such as algebra, geometry, and computer science. In carefully controlled studies, classes using the
algebra tutor system have shown dramatic achievement gains over control

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classesas much as 25 percent better on standardized tests of basic skills,
and 100 percent better on assessments of problem solving. The effective use
of the tutors is being studied in an IERI project and in the Pittsburgh SLC.
Looking to the future, REESE will continue to support basic and applied research
on teaching and learning that will subsequently influence the development of innovative instructional materials, curricula, pedagogical practices, and teacher training
in math and science education. REESE program officers have served, and will continue to serve, on committees that manage several NSF programs that support K
12 science and math education in addition to the SLCs. These include, for example,
Human and Social Dynamics, Information Technology Research, and Advanced
Learning Technologies.
Questions submitted by Representative Bart Gordon
Q1. As was the case last year, the budget request includes $57 million to reimburse
the Coast Guard for icebreaker services in support of Polar research. In addition,
for FY 2006, NSF contracted for additional icebreaker services at a cost of $9
million.
Has a decision been made on the way NSF will obtain icebreaker support beyond FY 2007? Should we expect to see NSF retain the responsibility for maintaining and operating the aging Coast Guard icebreakers, or will NSF have the
freedom to pursue other options for polar research support?
A1. NSF plans to continue to task the USCG to operate the HEALY in the Arctic,
either singly or in concert with other nations icebreakers such as the joint cruise
with the ODEN that was funded in FY 2005.
For Antarctic resupply, NSF plans to continue to secure icebreaking services from
a reliable provider at the most economical cost. USCG has stated that the NSFfunded maintenance being performed on the POLAR SEA in FY 2006 will enable
her to conduct the Antarctic break-in for at least FY 2007 and FY 2008. Whether
a back-up vessel will be needed in those years will be the subject of discussions with
the USCG in the next few months. The decision will be based on many factors, such
as progress on the POLAR SEAs maintenance work, casualties (if any) sustained
to the POLAR SEA during the FY 2007 break-in and escort duties, and predictions
of ice thickness and extent.
In securing polar icebreaking services to support NSF-funded research, NSF is
guided by the FY 2006 Presidents Budget Request, which noted that funding for
the polar icebreakers was transferred to NSF in order to permit NSF to define the
options for reimbursement or replacement of two of the ships. . ., and by Congressional action on the budget request noting that NSF is expected to immediately
begin a concurrent pursuit of alternative, more economical icebreaking solutions. . ..
NSF is in the process of reviewing comments from a Request For Information
seeking information on the availability and cost of icebreaking services from any capable providers. The response to this RFI will assist NSF in formulating a strategy
for meeting its Antarctic icebreaking needs over both the intermediate and the longterm. In addition, NSF is seeking funding to initiate projects that will enable it to
deal with a possible one-year failure of the ship-borne resupply mission. For example, increasing fuel storage at McMurdo Station; implementing the surface traverse
to South Pole Station; and investigating the feasibility of supplying South Pole Station largely by air from off-continent locations.
NSF does not operate or maintain the polar icebreakers. Rather, it is responsible
for tasking the USCG to operate them and for providing the associated operations
and maintenance funding in accordance with an MOA between the two agencies
that outlines the process for budget submission, review and approval, and reimbursement. However, without significant refurbishment, the USCG polar class icebreakers are very close to the end of their useful lives, and NSF will not be able
to rely on them beyond the next two to four years. Our longer-term solution to the
Antarctic resupply problem will be informed by the National Research Councils
study on Polar Icebreaker Roles and U.S. Future Needs. The Committee addressing
the Nations need for polar icebreakers has been very active and its meeting agendas demonstrate a commitment to ensuring that it appropriately and thoroughly
considers all aspects of the question. In parallel with the NRC Committees work,
NSF will commission design and operating concept studies to determine the most
reliable, efficient, and cost-effective resupply system.
Q2. The education directorate has been headed by an acting assistant director for
the past year, and three of the five division director positions are vacant. What

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steps are being taken to fill these positions and when may we expect to see permanent staff in place?
A2. Efforts to fill Executive positions within the Education and Human Resource
Directorate (EHR) are underway. Since October 2005 a total of five Division Director
positions have been advertised, and each is now at varying stages of being filled.
Each vacancy was announced with Senior Executive Service (SES) career and limited term appointment options, as well as Intergovernmental Personnel Act assignment options. Each announcement was open to all qualified applicants and posted
on the NSF web site and OPMs USAJobs. In addition, the positions were advertised
both in print and electronically in publications of The Chronicle for Higher Education and Science.
Details regarding the status of each vacancy follow:
Director, Division of Graduate Education: The vacancy announcement was posted from October 12, 2005 through January 16, 2006. As a result of the recruitment and merit staffing process a list of four highly recommended and five recommended candidates were referred to EHR for further consideration. EHR is
in the process of interviewing the four highly recommended candidates.
Director, Division of Human Resource Development: The vacancy announcement
was posted from December 23, 2005 through February 7, 2006. As a result of
the recruitment and merit staffing process a list of five candidates were referred
to EHR for further consideration. EHR is in the process of interviewing these
candidates.
Director, Division of Elementary, Secondary and Informal Education and Director, Division of Research, Evaluation and Communication: The announcements
for these two positions were posted from January 6, 2006 through February 17,
2006. The merit staffing process is underway and the most qualified applicants
will be referred to EHR for consideration.
Director, Division of Undergraduate Education: The vacancy announcement that
opened on February 10, 2006 closes on March 24, 2006. Once closed, the merit
staffing process will commence, and the most highly qualified will be referred
to EHR for consideration.
In addition to these five positions, the Office of the Director is conducting a nation-wide search to fill the Assistant Director position for the EHR Directorate.
Q3. The budget request includes $50 million, the first payment of a $200 million investment, to develop a leadership-class high-performance computing system for
support of scientific and engineering research. The Department of Energy is also
acquiring very high-performance computing systems. What is the nature and extent of coordination and collaboration between the two agencies in providing
high-performance computing capability so that the needs of U.S. scientists and
engineers in different fields are met?
A3. While DOE has specific energy-related mission requirements that they must address, NSF provides high performance computing resources specifically targeted to
fundamental research in the broad, open science and engineering communities.
Nonetheless, there are many ways in which the two agencies collaborate and coordinate activities in high performance computing.
For quite some time now, NSF has been coordinating and collaborating its high
performance computing systems activities with the Department of Energy (Office of
Science and National Nuclear Security Administration), the Department of Defenses DARPA High Productivity Computing Systems (HPCS) initiative as a mission partner in that activity during its Phases I and II, and with NASA.
There are instances where Department of Energy (DOE) and NSF jointly fund activities that are of common interest. An example of such a collaboration is the HighEnd Computing University Research Activity (HECURA) which began in 2004 and
is co-funded by NSF, DOE and DARPA. HECURA is an outgrowth of the interagency High-End Computing Revitalization Task Force (2003), in which NSF, DOD
and DOE played leadership roles. There are also several ongoing activities coordinated through the High-End Computing Interagency Working Group, a subgroup of
the Administrations Networking and Information Technology Research & Development (NITRD) National Coordinating Office (NCO). An example of such an activity
is the identification of a common set of benchmarks that are being used to guide
the acquisition of high performance computing systems; NSF and DOE play significant roles in this activity too.
Finally, NSF and DOE share high performance computing expertise through participation in review panels and committees, with DOE experts serving on NSF re-

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view panels and committees and NSF experts serving on DOE review panels and
committees. We expect to continue to have frequent discussions with our colleagues
in DOE and other federal agencies, as we move forward with the proposed FY 2007
acquisition.
The interactions described herein allow both NSF and DOE to leverage expertise
and promising practices and to minimize duplication of effort. Most importantly
however, it allows us, together, to better serve the American public, stimulating innovation and economic growth through scientific breakthroughs created with a portfolio of leadership-class systems.
Q4. A recent report from the National Academy of Sciences called for federal R&D
agencies to institute programs to allow institutions of higher education to acquire research instrumentation that costs in the $1 to $10 million range. The
report specifically recommends that NSF expand its Major Research Instrumentation program to allow awards over the current $2 million limit.
Q4a. What is your view of this recommendation, and what priority would you give
to such an instrumentation program?
A4a. In the 2003 report of the National Science Board entitled Science and Engineering Infrastructure for the 21st Century: the Role of the National Science Foundation (NSB02190), the Board recommended that NSF develop a funding mechanism
to support mid-sized instrumentation projects. This report was published shortly
after enactment of the NSF reauthorization law that included language doubling
NSFs budget over five years. Since that time, budgetary restrictions have limited
the agencys ability to initiate such a program.
As currently designed, NSFs Major Research Instrumentation Program (MRI)
supports instrumentation acquisition and development for research and research
training purposes for awards between $100,000 and $2 million. Increasing the scale
of the MRI program to include mid-size instrumentation (between $2 million and
$20 million) would require a higher degree of management oversight than is required for typical MRI awards. Many awards, even at the low end of this scale, require long-term commitments on the part of the host institution, the federal supporting agencies, and often the scientific community. The NSF currently supports
a small number of such research instrumentation efforts through other NSF programs. Rather than being supported by the MRI Program, proposals can be submitted to and awards can be made by divisions that support instrumentation. Before
an award is made, there are in-depth discussions with the cognizant research communities, the research institutions that are involved, and the federal agencies that
are partners. It is now clear that available opportunities and mechanisms are not
always transparent to the scientific community. Therefore, NSF senior management
will make changes this year to ensure more transparency of the processes it uses
to support mid-size instruments. Moreover, raising the cap on the MRI program is
currently under discussion. There will be some closure on this issue by July 2006.
The 2005 report of the National Academy of Sciences, Academic Research Instrumentation and Facilities was presented to the Director of NSF on January 5, 2006.
Since that presentation, NSF senior management has been studying the report
along with NSFs current set of (17) instrumentation programs, with a focus on how
we might best implement the numerous recommendations.
Q4b. What has been the effect of NSFs abandonment of cost sharing on the number
of awards provided under its existing Major Research Instrumentation program?
A4b. FY 2005 was the first year that the no cost sharing policy set by the National
Science Board was implemented. Based on one years data, it does not appear that
the number of awards provided under the existing MRI program was significantly
affected by the change in cost sharing. To guarantee the productive use of the equipment, the 2005 program solicitation required institutions to submit management
plans describing how they planned to address those costs that had previously been
considered as cost sharing throughout the life of the project. In addition, the management plan became an explicit review criterion. The drop in the number of proposals from the FY 2004 level to the FY 2005 level can be attributed to proposals
that were withdrawn (n=13) and returned without review (n=58) because they did
not respond to the changes in the MRI program. While the number of awards and
the success rate decreased between FY 2004 and FY 2005, the decline can be attributed to the decrease of approximately $20 million in program funds between those
years. Approximately 36 awards could have been made had there not been a decrease in the MRI program budget.
The following table has been provided for your reference.

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Q4c. Why doesnt cost sharing make sense for this kind of program as a way to leverage a greater national investment in cutting-edge research instrumentation?
A4c. Cost sharing may make sense for this kind of program as a way to leverage
greater national investment in cutting-edge research instrumentation. As noted
above, the emphasis has shifted from capital, one time, cost sharing requirements
to cost sharing by way of long-term institutional commitment to operations and
maintenance. Requiring awardees to document these costs leverages the investment
and ensures that the equipment is functioning, put to good use, and not idle due
to lack of resources to support ongoing cost for operations and maintenance. This
approach is consistent with the National Science Boards cost sharing policy while
still recognizing the partnership between the federal sponsors of research and the
grantee.
Q5. Last May, the NSFs Advisory Committee for Business and Operations reviewed
NSFs management of large facilities construction projects. It criticized what it
characterized as under-investment in engineering, cost-estimating and project
management support during the development stage when baseline project definitions are being formulated. Please comment on this finding. Do you believe the
NSF scientific directorates are budgeting adequately for the costs associated
with the development stage of large facilities projects which they must bear prior
to a projects approval for construction (after which costs are covered by funds
from the Major Research Equipment and Facilities Construction account)?
A5. Projects proposed for future construction funding must be well defined, well
budgeted, and there must be appropriate emphasis and resources provided to those
involved in planning so that there is a capable project management infrastructure
in place and prepared to execute construction. NSF has taken steps to make it clear
to our research communities, and to NSF staff, that NSF has these expectations and
that they will be held accountable for satisfying them. In November, NSF released
a new document, endorsed by the National Science Board, entitled Guidelines for
Planning and Managing the Major Research Equipment and Facilities Construction
Account which lays out NSFs expectations for a structured, incremental process of
planning, development, and assessment by NSF of proposed projects; proceeding
through a Conceptual Design, a Preliminary Design, and a Final Design Review
prior to commencement of construction. NSF recognizes this will cost money (increasing the investment in engineering, cost-estimating, and project management
leading to baseline definition) but the greater investment in pre-construction planning will result in net savings in terms of improved definition of a projects scope,
better assessment of a projects risks, the formulation of a plan that minimizes risk
exposure, a more robust budget estimate, and a better forecast of a facilitys likely
operating costs, so that NSF knows beforehand that these costs are supportable.
Under the new Guidelines, the NSFs MREFC Panel, with the independent assessment of the Deputy Director for Large Facility Projects, will make a recommendation, which the NSF Director must approve, in order to advance any candidate new project to a more advanced stage of pre-construction planning (for example, from Conceptual Design to Preliminary Design related activities). NSF recognizes that adequate investment in the pre-construction planning process is essential
to project advancement and eventual construction. Each Directorate/Office has the
responsibility to make that judgment regarding how much of their budget to devote

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to project planning versus investment in other base program activities, in order to
maintain and promote the vitality of the research in that area.
Q6. The past few independent auditors reports for NSF have pointed to shortcomings in the agencys post award management. NSF has developed procedures
for identifying high-risk awards, but the IG finds that NSF does not ensure that
all high-risk institutions are adequately monitored. The IGs last report indicates that, out of 167 high-risk institutions, only 25 were visited during the past
year. How does NSF plan to monitor high-risk institutions that are not visited?
Does NSF have the sufficient staff and travel funds to carry out substantially
more site visits?
A6. The strategic plan to monitor all institutions identified by the model as managing high risk awards is detailed in the Office of Budget, Finance and Award Management (BFA) Post-award Monitoring Standing Operating Guidance (SOG) 2005
2. It is a comprehensive, integrated plan for post-award monitoring of all institutions including those that manage high risk awards. Post award monitoring is not
limited to site visits and includes evaluation of final adjustments, FCTR transaction
testing, and monitoring by grants and agreements officers in the Division of Grants
and Agreements (DGA) and the Division of Acquisition and Cooperative Support
(DACS) as well as program officer monitoring, and evaluations performed by special
request. As part of its ongoing effort to strengthen its award monitoring program,
NSF management anticipates making a contract award in Spring 2006 that will provide additional resources to conduct desk reviews of high risk awards that are not
selected for award monitoring site visits during development of our annual monitoring plan. Once the contract is awarded, the task order for this particular deliverable will address the need to develop the specific procedures that will comprise the
desk reviews, including any needed follow up to results.
NSF management will continue to update the above noted SOG and linked policy
or procedural documents as appropriate based on changes in its operations including
items such as the above noted desk reviews. In addition, NSF management will ensure that the guidance clearly states how site visit selections are determined including the basis for excluding institutions managing high-risk awards from a site visit
review.
It is important to note that NSF management identifies awards as high risk; accordingly, NSF does not identify an institution itself as being high risk. This nuance
is important in that an institution is identified as managing a high risk award rather than being considered a high risk institution. In addition, it is important to understand that of the 167 institutions identified in the IGs last audit report as managing high risk awards, that not only were 25 visited in FY 2005 but also 48 had
been visited or audited during the previous four years and 49 had awards that were
due to expire. The remainder of institutions that were not visited results in only
45 institutions.
NSF management believes that the augmentation of our current resources with
contract resources will strengthen our Post Award Monitoring and Business Assistance Program. While the augmentation of existing staff and travel funds would certainly bring additional resources to our program, NSF strongly believes that the selection of institutions for site visits is based on a sound methodology that is one part
of its larger NSF Gold Standard Post Award Monitoring and Business Assistance
Program.
Questions submitted by Representative Eddie Bernice Johnson
Q1. Improvement of math and science education is a major longstanding responsibility of NSF. The Presidents proposed competitiveness initiative provides a
funding increase for NSF of nearly eight percent. Unfortunately, this same budget proposal actually cuts NSFs K12 education programs by seven percent.
Dr. Bement, within the healthy budget increase proposed for NSF for FY 2007,
why does K12 education fare so poorly?
If one looks at educational materials development, teacher development, and the
Math and Science Partnership program, which has been heavily focused on improving teacher performance, the FY 2007 budget proposal is 38 percent below
the FY 2004 level. You have even reorganized the education directorate in a way
that drops elementary and secondary education from the title of the division
that contains the remaining K12 programs. This certainly sends the signal that
NSF is de-emphasizing K12 education activities. Is this the case, and if not,
what do you consider NSFs role to be, and what is your long-term plan for supporting K12 science and math education?

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A1. The ongoing consolidation of the Math and Science Partnership at the Department of Education accounts for a significant portion of the drop in NSFs K12
budget (down $17.18 million from the FY 2006 Current Plan). Also, the K8 pilot
program was funded in FY 2006 and not in FY 2007 ($6.94 million). The total
planned reduction of these two programs combined is $24.12 million. With this
planned reduction taken into account, and when the entire NSF budget for K12
programs is counted, K12 investments throughout the Foundation actually increase by over 10 percent. This is because the Foundations education portfolio includes a number of investments throughout the Research and Related Activities account. This includes programs, such as the Graduate Teaching Fellowships in K
12 Education (GK12) program (managed by EHR and funded by both EHR and
R&RA), which contributes significantly to K12 education but whose funding is
counted as graduate research dollars.
The NSF portfolio for FY 2007 emphasizes four priorities that will strengthen the
science and engineering enterprise through investments in frontier research, the
workforce, education, and cutting-edge research tools. Bolstering K12 Education is
one of the four priorities, signaling its importance to the Foundation. NSF has a
long history of building strong research foundations and fostering innovation in K
12 science and mathematics education. Skills in science, technology, engineering,
and mathematics are increasingly necessary for success in the workforce and for full
participation in the life of the Nation. The Foundations education portfolio, including its K12 portfolio, resides in both the Education and Human Resources account
and the Research and Related Activities account. A new program to improve geoscience education at the middle and high school levels, for example, is funded in the
Research and Related Activities account.

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ANSWERS

TO

POST-HEARING QUESTIONS

Responses by Charles E. McQueary, Under Secretary, Science and Technology, Department of Homeland Security
Questions submitted by Chairman Sherwood L. Boehlert
Q1. The Fiscal Year 2007 (FY07) Department of Homeland Security (DHS) budget
request for the DHS Science and Technology (S&T) Directorate is organized by
portfolios (biological countermeasures, cyber security, critical infrastructure
protection, etc.).
Q1a. How is the money in each portfolio area being spent, by performer? Please provide for each area a breakdown of the amount of funding that was directed to
the private sector, Department of Energy laboratories, federal laboratories,
other government agencies, and universities in FY05. Please provide an estimate of the same information for FY06.
A1a. The following are obligations against the FY 2005 S&T Directorate appropriation by Program, Project, Activity (PPA); the obligations include those made through
March 30, 2006.

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Q1b. How much funding did the Homeland Security Advanced Research Projects
Agency distribute in FY05? How much do you estimate it will distribute in
FY06 and FY07? Please specify this distribution by portfolio and performers as
above.
A1b. The following are obligations against the FY 2005 S&T Directorate appropriation by Program, Project, Activity (PPA) made through HSARPA; the obligations include those made through March 30, 2006.

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The S&T Directorate is working to determine the appropriate FY 2006 funding
levels to be directed through HSARPA to private sector, national laboratories, federal laboratories, other government agencies, and universities while considering how
best to meet the Directorates and Departments mission. Based on the FY 2005 figures, the S&T Directorate anticipates a similar funding breakdown by PPA, through
HSARPA, for FY 2006 and likewise for FY 2007.
Q2. In his testimony, Dr. McQueary mentioned a Research, Development, Testing
and Evaluation (RDT&E) process that has been developed to assist with the determination of priorities. Please explain how you assess the threats and
vulnerabilities across a broad range of possible terrorist actions and develop a
strategy to reduce the risks through investments in science and technology? Do
you take into account the DHS mission to respond to natural disasters in your
prioritization of projects?
A2. The S&T Directorates RDT&E process consists of four main sub-processes: 1)
needs and risk assessment, 2) strategic planning, 3) program definition, and 4) program execution. The first two sub-processes ensure that the S&T Directorate considers user needs, available intelligence, big-picture risks, national goals and inputs
from other external agencies and advisory bodies to establish its annual RDT&E
program. The second two sub-processes provide a framework for program execution
using the best available systems engineering and program management techniques.
Threat assessments and material threat determinations developed by DHS are critical factors in the determination of requirements and the identification of critical capability gaps.
Risks and gaps are identified using multiple sources and techniques including the
Homeland Security Councils 15 Planning scenarios which include two catastrophic
natural disasters. In developing solutions, the process also engages end-users
throughout the requirements definition, development, testing, and transition phases.
One of the primary areas where end-users are directly involved in requirements
generation is the Emergency Responder community. Firefighters, law enforcement
officers, and other federal, State, and local agencies have been key partners and participants in various workshops to identify and define the technology needs of those
entities that have the responsibility to respond to all-hazards events including natural disasters.
Q3. DHS received $23 million in FY06 to conduct a planning and feasibility study
for a National Bio- and Agro-defense Facility, which would serve as a replacement for the Plum Island Animal Disease Center. No additional request was
submitted for the new facility for FY07.
Q3a. Please describe the timeline and process for how DHS will decide whether to
build a new facility and how it will choose a site. What are DHSs long-term
plans for funding this large capital project?
A3a. The S&T Directorate initiated an Expression of Interest (EOI) to explore potential sites for the National Bio- and Agro-defense Facility (NBAF). The EOI was
published Jan. 17, 2006 in the Federal Business Opportunities and Jan. 19, 2006
in the Federal Register. Site criteria and requirements were developed by an interagency technical working group [including DHS, the U.S. Department of Agriculture
(USDA), and the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS)] to evaluate
sites that would best support research in high-consequence animal and zoonotic diseases in support of Homeland Security Presidential Directives, HSPD9 and HSPD
10.
The results of the EOI will be evaluated in an environmental impact statement
(EIS) in the fall of 2006, at which time the public will have the opportunity to comment on the scope of the analysis. In addition, the S&T Directorate issued a solicitation in April 2006 to procure architect-engineer services to conduct conceptual design studies and initial cost estimates for the NBAF. The conceptual design will be
completed in 2007. Under the present schedule construction for NBAF will begin in
2009 and be operational by the end of 2012.
Q3b. In Dr. McQuearys testimony, he mentioned that we have an insufficient supply
of laboratory space for foreign animal diseases. What evaluations have been
conducted to assess the Nations future needs for capacity in this area? Have
these evaluations been coordinated with the National Institutes of Health,
which is currently providing funding to build a number of bio-containment laboratories across the country?
A3b. The departments of Homeland Security (DHS), Health and Human Services
(HHS) and Agriculture (USDA) have together determined that their interrelated bio-

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defense missions with respect to agriculture security all require new research and
development infrastructure that can accommodate extensive testing with a variety
of animal models.
This conclusion was reinforced in two independent reports: a Report of the joint
U.S. Animal Health Association/American Association of Veterinary Laboratory Diagnosticians Committee on Diagnostic Laboratory and Veterinary Workforce Development1 and the GAO Report to Congressional Committees, GAO06132 Plum Island Animal Disease Center,2 December 2005. These reports recognize the importance of having adequate facilities to counter todays agroterrorism threats. They
state respectively that: over 75 percent of all emerging infectious diseases and over
80 percent of biothreat agents of concern are zoonotic; and that over 40 contagious
foreign animal diseases threaten the United States agriculture economy, the largest
and most integrated in the world.
Currently, the Plum Island Animal Disease Center (PIADC) provides the only
U.S. research and confirmatory diagnostic capability for high-consequence foreign
animal diseases. It is also the only laboratory in the United States equipped with
research facilities that permit study of these diseases in livestock, such as cattle,
sheep and swine. The proposed National Bio- and Agro-defense Facility (NBAF)
would replace the existing PIADC facility and enhance capabilities to meet the mandated national bio- and agro-defense mission requirements of DHS, HHS and USDA.
NBAF is envisioned to provide the Nation with the first integrated agricultural,
zoonotic disease and public health research, development, testing and evaluation facility with the capability to address threats from human pathogens, high-consequence zoonotic disease agents, and foreign animal disease.
Site criteria and requirements for NBAF were developed by an interagency technical working group, including DHS, USDA, and HHS to evaluate sites that would
best support research in high-consequence animal and zoonotic diseases in support
of Homeland Security Presidential Directives, HSPD9 and HSPD10.
Q4. Funding for research on decontamination technologies and protocols appears to
be receiving less attention than in prior budget requests. The FY06 budget request for DHS called for a reduction in funding for building decontamination
research and development (R&D) programs, and the FY07 DHS budget request
contained little reference to decontamination programs. What will be DHSs role
in addressing the remaining challenges to decontamination of chemical agents
in FY07? How will this be coordinated with the Environmental Protection Agency?
A4. In the chemical countermeasures program, the emphasis on decontamination
has not decreased. Rather, it increases from FY 2005 through FY 2007. In FY 2005,
our budget for decontamination was $800,000. Our FY 2006 decontamination budget
is $8.8 million and our FY 2007 request is $9 million.
The decontamination program consists of two major components. The first is a Facility Restoration Demonstration Program, which concludes in FY 2008. It will provide guidance on the use of decontamination technologies for restoration after a
chemical attack. The guidance will be developed in concert with transit facility Los
Angeles International Airport (LAX) management and transition to other similar
operational situations. EPA participates on the advisory board for this demonstration program.
The second program is a research and development (R&D) program to develop approaches to fill gaps in our ability to decontaminate persistent chemicals. This R&D
program increases substantially from FY 2006 to FY 2007. In FY 2006, our budget
for decontamination R&D is $2.9 million, and the budget request for FY 2007 is $4
million.
The program addresses emerging threat materials (such as non-traditional
agents) and specific operational gaps. EPA is a key partner in this effort. The
Science and Technology (S&T) Directorate and the EPAs Homeland Security Research Center hold annual joint workshops to coordinate programs such as this.
Additionally the S&T Directorate works closely with the EPA on related projects
that provide the capability to conduct analysis of environmental samples in the
wake of a chemical attack, which is an important adjunct to decontamination in the
restoration process. Specifically, the Department and the EPA are working together
to ensure that the DHS-developed mobile laboratory will be consistent with EPA
practice when it transitions to EPA.
1 Report of the USAHA/AAVLD Committee on Diagnostic Laboratory and Veterinary Workforce Development, http://www.usaha.org/committees/reports/2005/report-lvwi-2005.pdf
2 GAO Report to Congressional Committees, GAO06132 Plum Island Animal Disease Center, December 2005.

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DHS is also establishing, in FY 2006 and FY 2007, prototype fixed laboratories
that can analyze environmental samples that contain chemical warfare agents.
These laboratories will be established in the Washington, D.C. and New York City
regions for eventual transition to EPA stewardship. Multiple agencies, including
EPA and the Department of Defense (DOD), have joined with the S&T Directorate
to develop this capability.
Q5. When DHS develops a useful new technology, like BioWatch, that gets deployed
into an essential national system, the DHS S&T Directorate then has to allocate
an increasing proportion of its R&D budget to maintaining and operating this
new system. Can the S&T Directorate hand these new technologies off to somewhere else within DHS? How will this be managed in the future as new technologies are purchased, installed, and maintained by cities and other local communities?
A5. To the extent that the S&T Directorate is responsible for maintaining and operating the systems that arise out of the technology it develops, the directorate has
to allocate an increasing portion of its research and development (R&D) budget for
these activities. Ideally, this would be addressed by transitioning the systems operation to a DHS operational directorate or to end users. The S&T Directorate has
looked closely at this transition issue for the BioWatch system, since its maintenance and operation requires about 25 percent of the Biological Countermeasures
Portfolio budget. A BioWatch Transition Study concluded that in its current form,
BioWatch requires considerable technical support for its operations and in evolving
its concept-of-operations. Hence, it is not yet ready for transition. We believe that
once we develop and field the fully autonomous Gen-3 BioWatch system, that it
would be appropriate to transition BioWatch to a DHS operational directorate such
as the Preparedness Directorate, and to fund that activity either directly through
that directorate or the Office of Grants and Training program.
Similar considerations will apply to other systems developed by the S&T Directorate. In general, systems that are reasonably self-contained, commercial systems,
can be transferred to operational directorates. Systems that are still evolving and
require considerable scientific reach-back for their routine operations, are best retained within the S&T Directorate.
Q6. The Homeland Security Act of 2002 requires DHS to establish a Homeland Security Institute (HSI) to provide analytical services, including risk assessment
and vulnerability modeling. What tasks has it accomplished to date? Please provide examples. What projects are planned for FY06 and FY07? Have other units
of DHS utilized HSIs capabilities? How are those projects funded?
A6. To date, the Homeland Security Institute (HSI) has developed and continues to
refine core capabilities in the areas outlined in the Homeland Security Act of 2002;
including systems analysis, risk-consequence-vulnerability analyses, operational and
capability assessments, multi-faceted threat evaluations, economic and policy analysis, alternative investment comparisons, and simulations. As envisioned by Congress, the HSI is developing rigorous independent concepts, like an overarching risk
management methodology and decision-support tool to help prioritize programs
which are currently being incorporated in the Science and Technology (S&T) Directorate and are planned for roll-out in the DHS planning process.
At the request of a variety of DHS sponsors, the HSI studies and analyzes germane topics like Wide Area Biological Restoration, Sector Specific Infrastructure
R&D Needs, Illegal Immigration Modeling, Improvised Explosive Devices Scenario
Modeling, and other similarly focused issues. HSI has also been working with various standards committees to help foster development and promote community-wide
acceptance of homeland security related standards. HSI was also funded to assess
Urban Bio-Monitoring Architecture, Vulnerability of the Global Positioning System
Network, Advances in Red Teaming Methods, in addition to evaluating the readiness of federal assets like the National Science and Technology Threat Assessment
and Reachback Support Center and the federal laboratory network.
HSI continues to reach out and build its understanding of the homeland security
complex through interactions and funded tasks with the various DHS operating elements like the Office of Policy, the Office of Intelligence and Analysis, Customs and
Border Protection, the Office of Grants and Training, the Coast Guard, and the DHS
Preparedness Directorate. Through these diverse interactions, HSI develops knowledge to describe strategic processes and interactions. This knowledge, in turn, helps
HSI to build overarching frameworks for DHS processes that can emphasize the
particular requirements within the various operating elements and identify
synergies throughout the Department.

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Each year, the S&T Directorate and the Institute, in coordination with the Assistant Secretary for Policy, the Under Secretary for Preparedness, and the Chief Intelligence Office, work together to develop an annual research plan. This plan supports
projects that serve the entire Department by performing research and analysis
needed to address the Departments most critical and strategic initiatives, such as
those outlined in the Departments Integrated Planning Guidance (IPG). The $10
million annual core funding investments reflect the Secretarys five priorities: improving preparedness; strengthening the borders and reforming immigration; increasing information sharing with its partners; enhancing transportation security
through more efficient and secure system control; and strengthening the Departments organization to maximize its performance.
The S&T Directorate funds HSI core tasks, while analytic tasks may be funded
by various sponsors throughout DHS including the S&T Directorate. Core tasks are
intended to be cross-cutting in nature and scoped to address broader and longerterm research needs and strategic issues of the Department. Analytic tasks support
more immediate research that is focused on specific issues. In FY 2005, the S&T
Directorate funding was more than double that of the FY 2004 funding level; and
the S&T core funding represented 67 percent of the total funding. The FY 2006
funding for HSI includes the same amount of core funding as FY 2005; but the FY
2006 funding ratios are about 45 percent S&T core, 25 percent S&T analytic, and
30 percent non-S&T analytic. The planned FY 2007 funding for HSI is expected to
increase by 25 percent due to increased analytic task fundingpredominantly from
non-S&T elements within DHS.
Questions submitted by Representative Bart Gordon
Q1. The R&D summary from the Presidents FY 2007 budget shows that basic research funding at DHS drops by 48 percent, which is only three percent of the
total R&D funding level. Also, applied research falls by 14 percent. Are you satisfied that the balance between near-term technology development and deployment and more long-term R&D is addressed satisfactorily by this budget allocation? How will DHS meet future threats unless it supports a more long range
vision?
A1. The emphasis toward the development-and-deployment end of the R&D spectrum is to provide DHS agents, officers, screeners, and enforcement personnel the
best counter-terror tools available in the shortest amount of time. Most of their expressed needssuch as improved detection of fraudulent documents, faster scheduling of duty assignments, more secure cargo containers, easy access to multiple
databases, robust communications, information sharing protocols, user-friendly command and control techniques, simpler ways to tell if a white powder is dangerous,
better identification of watercraft in harbors, even relatively simple (but meaningful) upgrades in their uniforms, protective gear, and equipmentdo not require
basic research or, in some cases, only require a little applied research.
However, this focus does not mean that critical, long-term issues are being abandoned. Substantial (and necessary) basic and applied research is underway in many
critical areassuch as improved biometric identification techniques; reliable ways
to determine hostile intent; automated video scene understanding; and detection of
chemical, biological, and explosive substances in the most stressing and difficult environments. For the most critical DHS long-term needs, diligent, careful research is
underway.
Because basic research programs typically have a longer timeline than applied
and developmental programs, it is essential that the S&T Directorate always has
a stable basic research program in areas relevant to the Departments and the S&T
Directorates strategic objectives. The S&T Directorate budget is currently focused
on areas of highest risk and greatest benefit, aligned with the Departments and the
S&T Directorates strategic plans. The following shows the breakdown.
In FY 2005 approximately two percent of S&T Directorate funding went to basic
research, 79 percent to applied research, and 19 percent to developmental researchvery similar to our FY 2004 budget allocations. The budget allocation in FY
2006 and FY 2007 is expected to be similar. An improved method for tracking these
types of allocations was established in FY 2006 and will improve the accuracy of
estimates in the future. The table below shows budget allocations by PPA with
actuals for FY 2005 and estimates for FY 2006 and FY 2007. Dollars shown are in
thousands.

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Q2. The Science Committee has advocated that DHS allot greater resources to cyber
security research, and this budget request does provide a 47 percent funding increase. Unfortunately this is from a very small base, so that the funding for
cyber security, $23 million, is only about two percent of the Science and Technology Directorates budget. Will we see efforts in the next few years toward substantial increases in cyber security research, or are you satisfied that the priority
reflected by this request is consistent with addressing the potential threat to the
Nation from cyber attack?
A2. We believe that our investment balance among the various technical portfolios,
including cyber security, is appropriate for the resources that the S&T Directorate
currently has available. The allocation of funding resources to portfolios in the S&T
Directorate is based on a formal planning process that takes into consideration
risks, threats, vulnerabilities, and other strategic objectives, to perform
prioritization within and across technical portfolios. The Department is highly supportive of the planning approach taken by the S&T Directorate, and believes that
this process results in technically sound and supportable decision-making with regards to funding allocations.
Q3. Explosives Countermeasures is one of the major components of the S&T budget.
How are activities supported at DHS related to DOD efforts in this area? Also,
NSF proposes a new initiative on sensors relevant to the detection of explosives.
What is the nature and extent of coordination on explosives programs between
NSF and DHS?
A3. Although Department of Defense (DOD) and the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) explosives threats and their associated scenarios are different, common
technologies employed as explosives countermeasures can be appropriate. When appropriate, DOD and DHS have leveraged their resources and collaborated on research, development, testing and evaluation (RDT&E) efforts. For example, the
Night Vision Laboratorys evaluation of Millimeter-wave and Infrared cameras to
screen people for suicide bombs.
The S&T Directorate also works to coordinate explosives countermeasures programs with the National Science Foundation (NSF). The S&T Directorate plans to
work with the NSF on explosives countermeasures projects relevant to the domestic
improvised explosive device threat. In addition, the S&T Directorate plans to collaborate with the NSF to develop a strategic roadmap of the most promising enabling sciences.
Q4. The budget request merges the Rapid Prototyping Program with the Emerging
Threats Program into the Emergent and Prototypical Technology Program. The
funding for the new program, which looks at emerging threats and seeks rapid
solutions, as well as provides a clearinghouse relevant to public safety technologies, is 40 percent below the previous combined funding level. What are the
reasons for this funding decrease in an area that would seem to have a high
priority?
A4. The Science and Technology (S&T) Directorate places high priority on identifying and assessing emerging threats and developing rapid solutions to those

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threats for which countermeasures do not exist. We believe that our investment balance among the various technical portfolios, including Emergent and Prototypical
Technology, is appropriate for the resources that the S&T Directorate currently has
available.
Congressional appropriations for the separate portfolios in FY 2006 (Conference
Report H.R. 2360, Department of Homeland Security Appropriations Act, 2006) were
$8 million for Emerging Threats and $35 million for Rapid Prototyping, for a total
of $43 million. Included in the Rapid Prototyping funding for FY 2006 was $10 million to evaluate civil aviation defense technologies and $4 million to encourage further implementation of Section 313 of the Homeland Security Act of 2002, and to
increase the speed innovative products are being reviewed, certified, and released
to market; these one-time funding actions total about 33 percent of the combined
FY 2006 appropriated funding and 40 percent of the FY 2006 appropriations for
Rapid Prototyping.
Q5. After a large funding decrease for FY 2006, the University Programs receives an
additional four percent cut in the request. Why does this program continue on
a downward path?
A5. The Presidents FY 2007 budget request for University Programs is $52 million.
This funding will allow us to sustain six DHS Research and Education Centers of
Excellence. Collectively, these centers are working on more than 150 projects, with
higher education institutions that include Historically Black Colleges and Universities and other Minority Serving Institutions, State and local agencies, and industry in numerous states. Hundreds of researchers associated with these centers are
conducting multidisciplinary research in risk and economic analysis of terrorism
events, agricultural security, social and behavioral aspects of terrorism, and high
consequence event preparedness and response. The Science and Technology (S&T)
Directorate has teamed with other entities to work on topics of mutual interest. The
first cooperative center is with the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and focused on microbial risk assessment. The other is with Lawrence Livermore National
Laboratory in discrete sciences. Additionally, University Programs will continue to
sustain a cadre of public service-oriented scientists and engineers from undergraduates to postdoctoral scholars.

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